
Book^A3/V-4^ 



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MEDICAL AND DENTAL DIREaORY 
OF NEW ORLEANS 



FIRST EDITION 




1920 



FONTANA PRINTING CO. 
New Orleans, La. 



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YOUR PATRONAGE IS SOLICITED S 

J. A. MAJORS CO. I 

1301 Tulane Avenue = 

Phone Main 3252 New Orleans, La. | 

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BRANCH STORE: 

1014 S. Rampart Street, Opposite Union Station 

Official Appointed Railroad Watch Inspector 

Phone Main 9454 Established 1893 

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AUGUSTIN'S 

MEDICAL AND DENTAL DIRECTORY 

OF NEW ORLEANS 



By George Augustin, 
New Orleans, La. 



Ex-Librarian Orleans Parish Medical Society, New Or- 
leans; Fellow American Society for the Ad- 
vancement of Science ; Member New 
Orleans Academy of Sciences. 



ADVISORY EDITORIAL COMMITTEE. 

ISADORE Dyer, M. D. 
Charles Chassaignac, M. D. 

Joseph A. Danna, M. D. 

Lionel L. Cazenavette, M. D. 

Allan C. Eustis, M. D. 

William M. Perkins, M. D. 

John T. Crebbin, M. D. 

Wallace Wood, Jr., D. D. S. 

C. Victor Vignes, D. D. S. 

Edward B. Ducasse, D. D. S. 

FIRST EDITION. 
1920 



Copyrighted and Published by 
George Augustin, 
New Orleans, La. 



SCHROEDER 

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INCORPORATED 

1314 Canal Street Phone: Main 2876 

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SUMMARY OF PRINCIPAL CONTENTS. 



1. Names of New Orleans physicians, alphabetically 
arranged, with college and year of graduation, special 
branch of medicine, location, office hours, telephone 
number, etc. 

2. List of physicians, arranged by office buildings. 

3. List of Specialists. 

4. Names of Dentists, arranged alphabetically, with same j 
information as in No. 1. i 

5. List of Dentists, arranged by office buildings. } 

6. List of dental specialists-, orthodonists, radiologists, } 
(etc.). j 

7. List of Hospitals, Sanitariums, Clinics and kindred ♦ 
medical or semi-medical institutions, with list of man- ♦ 
agers, physicians in charge, number of beds, etc. ♦ 

8. Historical Sketches of the Medical Institutions of j 
Louisiana (Tulane, Loyola, Charity Hospital, etc.). j 

9. Medical and Dental Laws of Louisiana, revised to date. j 

10. Condensed street guide of New Orleans, for "Hurry j 
Up'' information. j 

11. Traffic Regulations of the City of New Orleans. j 

12. .Jots in the Medical History of New Orleans, from 1 



1700 to date. ! 



13. The Books of 1919. 

14. "The Old Doctor's Romance." \ 

15. Index. j 

j 

♦ 

I 

♦ 



THE 

Augu^in Library of Medical 

Research 

is prepared to furnish complete 
Bibliographies at short notice 

Business Office: 

1216 Maison Blanche Building. Phone 5214. Hours: 1 to 5 

Reading Room and Library : 

1115 Louisiana Avenue, near Magazine. Hours : by appointment 
Phone Uptown 1 067 

New Orleans, Louisiana 



King's Eye Glass Shop 



EFFICIENCY T7-, y j-i /^^ I C* 7 ^^^ 

IIPc'^'.^^KiGHT Km^ s hue Lilass ryhot) gu^Weed 



MRS. J. J. KING, Proprietress 

The On'y Registered Woman Opti ian in the South 



Former l y in the Now Located at 

Audubon Bldg. 221 - Bourbon Street - 221 



Opposite 

Hotel Grunewald 



Legendre's Drug Store 

^M^edical Building, 1 24 Baronne Street, New Orleans, La. 

I 

REMEMBER THAT WE ARE IN 

BUSINESS FOR YOUR HEALTH | 

SERVICE. Free delivery to any part of the city. \ 



I I 

♦ 

i 

♦ 

♦ 

1 1 

J FOREWORD. I 

♦ ♦ 

! AuGUSTiN's Medical Directory is the only book of its j 

I kind ever published in New Orleans. It is unique, compre- j 
n hensive and it has been the author's ambition to make it as ♦ 

II accurate and impartial as possible. If he has failed in ♦ 
! this, it is through no fault of his. The work of compiling ♦ 

♦ the information contained in this little volume has been ♦ 
dfficult, owing to the lack of general co-operation from ♦ 
those who are solely benefitted thereby; but t has been the ♦ 

♦ same story from time immemorial and it will undoubtedly ♦ 
|| be the same until Gabriel blows his clarion and the stars go j 
I crashing through space to everlasting doom — professional j 
I men are slaves to the Manara" deity and trust to a mor- j 
;; row which never dawns. } 
; I launch this little book with the conscientious belief that j 
} it will be of genuine benefit to every man or woman who j 
J has occasion to consult it. either for instruction or through j 
;| mere curiosity. There is information scattered through its } 

I pages which will be found in no other publication, and the } 
; editor sincerely believes that it will be of benefit not only || 
! to those it individually concerns, but to the public at large. || 
!! If someone has been overlooked, don't blame Augustin. ]| 

II Every Doctor and Dentist in New Orleans has been given a I 
!' chance to be represented, and we go to press with the sat- \\ 
'\ isfaction that we have done all we could to please everybody. !! 
! If you are not satisfied with your record^ in this volume, ;| 
j my dear medical and stomatological friends, let Augustin II 

♦ know about it and amende honorable will be made in our 1 

♦ 1921 edition — for this book is but the precursor of a yearly II 

♦ publication on the same subject. 11 

j . George Augustin. I 

♦ New Orleans. La., February 1', 1920. I 

I I 



Local Committee on Arrangements 

American Medical Association 



Seventy-First Annual Session 

To Be Held At 

New Orleans, La. 



Convention April 26-30, 1920 



HEADQUARTERS 
1216 Maison Blanche Building 

NEW ORLEANS, LA. 

Dr. a. E. Fossiee, Chairman, 921 Canal Street 
Dr. T. J. DiMiTRY, Secretary, 3601 Prytania Streeet 
Dr. Paul J. Gelpi, Treasurer, 931 Canal Street 



SUB-COMMITTEES 



Advisory. 



Dr. Ciias. Chassaigxac, Chairman 
211 Camp Street 

Section Meetings 

Dr. IIo.meu Dui'UY, Chairman 
124 Baronne Street 

Registration 

Dr. IIix'tor K. P.KitxADAS, Chairman 
124 Baronne Street 

Finance 

Dr. .T. W. Newman ,, Chairman 

Touro Infirmary 

Dr. .Tos. E. Knighton, Vice-Chairman 

Shreveport,' La. 



Entertainment 



Dj;. 



A.MEDKi-: Gr.vnger^ Chairman 
021 Canal Street 

Halls and Meeting Places 

Dii. William II. See.max, Chairman 
S30 Canal Street 

Scientific Exhibits 

Dr. C. C. Bass, Chairman 
1551 Canal Street 

Commercial Exhibits 

Dr. W. II. lU.ocK^ Chairman 
921 Canal Street 

Publicity 

Dr. II.\ MILTON p. Jones, Chairman 
3001 Prytania Street 



Tran sp ortati on 

Dr. II. \Y. E. Waltt-ku. Chairman 
830 Canal Street 

Sign and Placards 

Dr. E. L. Eeckert, Chairman 
830 Canal Street 

Hotels 

Dj!. .1. .1. WvMER Chairman 
921 Canal Street 

Badges 

Dr. .1. BiuNEY (iLTHHiE, Chairman 
921 Canal Street 

Information 

Dr. Allan Eustis, Chairman 
3r)21 Prytania Street 

Golf 

Dr. .Toxin B. Elliott, .Tit., Chairma?i 
921 Canal Street 

Membership 

Dr. William M. I'eukins, Chairman 
H'M) Canal Street 

Women Physicians 

Dr. Elizabeth Bass, Chairman 
; > .") 1 3 Pr y ta n i a Street 



Printing 



Di!. W. II. K.voi.LE, Chaiiman 
124 Baronne Street 

Clinics 

!. Herman B. (tessner. Chairman 
921 Canal Street 



10 



THE NEW ORLEANS SESSION. 

Headquarters for the Registration Bureau and the Exhibits. 

The Josephine Hutchinson Memorial Building, the home 
of the Tulane University School of Medicine, will house the 
Registration Bureau, the Information Bureau, the Associa- 
tion branch postoffice, and- the Scientific and Commercial 
exhibits. It will also provide meeting places for three of 
the sections. Thus, the coming annual session will center 
at Tulane. The Hutchinson Memorial Building is near the 
business center of the city on Canal street, between Villere 
and Robertson. This convenient location, the attractions 
of the exhibits, and the assured hospitality of the Louisiana 
profession extended through the Tulane Medical School as- 
sure a hearty welcome to those who attend the annual 
session at New Orleans, April 26 to 30, 1920. 
Hotel Headquarters. 

The following hotels have been designated as the general 
and the various section headquarters for the New Orleans 
session : 

Practice' of Medicine — St. Charles. 

Surgery, General and Abdomi7ial — Grunewald. 

Ophthalmology — Monteleone. 

Laryngology, Otology and Rhinology — Monteleone. 

Diseases of Children — St. Charles. 

Pliarmacology and Physiology — Planters. 

Stomatology — Lafayette. 

Nervous and Mental Diseases — Lafayette. 

Dermatology — De Soto. 

Preventive Medicine and Public Health — De Soto. 

Urology — St. Charles. 

Orthopedic Surgery — Grunewald. 

Gastro-Enterology and Proctology — Lafayette. 

General Headquarters — Grunewald. 

To Netu Orleans by Boat. 

Inquiries received from various parts of the country indi- 
cate that a number of physicians would like to make the trip 
to New Orleans by boat. These prompt the suggestion that 
physicians conveniently near to the Atlantic Sea Board and 
Gulf ports, as well as those at different points along the 
Mississippi and Ohio rivers, might arrange boat parties 
which should provide a pleasant and restful journey. It 
has been suggested further that if boats were chartered to 
go to New Orleans from different points and were docked 



1 1 



there, these '*house boat parties" would provide cool and j 

delightful quarters for those who prefer to stay on the j 

boats during the session. j 

AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. j 

OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES, 1919-1920. 

Officers. 

President — Alexander Lambert, New York City. 

President-Elect — William C. Braisted, U. S. Navy. 

First Vice President — David L. Edsall, Boston ( Mass. 

Second Vice President — Emery Marvel, Atlantic City, 
N. J. 

Third Vice President — Eugene S. Talbot, Chicago. 

Fourth Vice President — George H. Kress, Los Angeles, 
Calif. 

Secretary — Alexander R. Craig, Chicago. 

Treasurer — William Allen Pusey, Chicago. 

Speaker House of Delegates — Hubert Work, Pueblo, 
Colo. 

Vice-Speaker House of Delegates — Dwight H. Murray, 
Syracuse, N. Y. 

Editor and General Manager — George H. Simmons, Chi- 
cago. 

Board of Trustees — Philip Marvel, Chairman, Atlantic 
City, 1920; W. T. Sarles, Sparta, Wis., 1920; H. Bert Ellis, 
Los Angeles, Calif., 1920 ; Frank Billings, Secretary, Chi- 
cago, 1921; Wendell C. Phillips, New York, 1921; Thomas 
McDavitt, St. Paul, 1921; A. R. Mitchell, Lincoln, Nebr., 
1922; D. Chester Brown, Danbury, Conn., 1926; Oscar 
Dowling, Shreveport, La., 1922. 

Judicial Council — I. C. Chase, Fort Worth, Tex., 1920; 
H. A. Black, Pueblo, Colo., 1921 ; Randolph Winslow, Balti- 
more, 1922 ; W. S. Thayer, Baltimore, 1963 ; M. L. Harris, 
Chairman, Chicago, 1924; Alexander R. Craig, Secretary, 
Chicago. 

Council on Health and Public Instruction — Milton Board, 
Louisville, Ky., 1960; Victor C. Vaughan, Chairman, Ann 
Arbor, Mich.,^ 1921 ; Walter B. Cannon, Boston, 1922; W. S. 
Rankin, Raleigh, N. C, 1923; Haven Emerson, New York 
City, 1924 ; Frederick R. Green, Secretary, Chicago. 

Council on Medical Education — Robert C. Coffey, Port- 
land, Ore., 1920; W. D. Haggard, Nashville, Tenn., 1961; 
William Pepper, Philadelphia, 1922; Arthur D. Bevan, 
Chairman, Chicago, 1923 ; Isadore Dyer, New Orleans, La., 
1924; N. P. Colwell, Secretary, Chicago. 



Council on Scientific Assembly — J. Shelton Hosley, 
Chairman, Richmond, Va., 1920; E. S. Judd, Rochester, 
Minn., 1921; Roger S. Morris, Cincinnati, 1922; F. P. Gen- 
genbach, Denver, ad interim; Alexander R. Craig, Secre- 
tary of the Association, ex-officio. 

Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry — G. W. McCoy, 
Washington, D. C, 1920; F. G. Novy, Ann Arbor, Mich.,, 
1920; George H. Simmons, Chairman, Chicago, 1920; L. 
G. Rowntree, Minneapolis, 1961 ; Torald Sollmann, Cleve- 
land, 1921; Lafayette B. Mendel, New Haven, 1921; Reid 
Hunt, Boston, Mass., 1922 ; W. W. Palmer, New York, 1926 ; 
Julius Stieglitz, Chicago, 1922; R. A. Hatcher, New York, 
1923 ; A. W. Hewlett, San Francisco, 1923 ; W. T. Longcope, 
New York City, 1923; John Howland, Baltimore, 1924; 
Henry Kraemer, Ann Arbor, Mich., 1924; C. L. Alsberg, 
Washington, D. C, 1924; W. A. Puckner, Secretary, Chi- 
cago. 

Sections and Chairmen. 

Practice of Medicine — Chairman, James S. McLester, Bir- 
mingham, Ala.; Vice Chairman, Joseph H. Pratt, Boston; 
Secretary, G. Canby Robinson, Washington University Medi- 
cal School, St. Louis. 

Surgery, General and Ahdvomiyial — Chairman, Dean D. 
Lewis, Chicago; Vice Chairman, Malvern B. Clopton, St. 
Louis; Secretary, George P. Muller, 1930 Spruce St., Phila- 
delphia. 

Obstetrics, Gynecology and Abdominal Surgery — Chair; 
man, Reuben Peterson, Ann Arbor, Mich. ; Vice Chairman, 
Francis LeS. Reder, St. Louis, Mo. ; Secretary, Sidney A. 
Chalfant, 7048 Jenkins, Arcade Bldg., Pittsburgh. 

Opthalmology — ^Chairman, Allen Greenwood, Boston, 
Mass. ; Vice Chairman, Nelson M. Black, Milwaukee ; Secre- 
tary, George S. Derby, 23 Bay State Rd., Boston. 

Laryngology, Otology and Rhinology — Chairman, Joseph 
C. Beck, Chicago; Vice Chairman, George M. Coates, Phila- 
delphia; Secretary, William B. Chamberlain, 1021 Prospect 
Ave., Cleveland. 

Diseases of Children — Chairman, Fritz B. Talbot, Boston; 
Vice Chairman, Julius H. Hess, Chicago; Secretary, 
Emanuel C. Fleischner, 350 Post St., San Francisco. 

Pharmacology and Theurajoeutics — Chairman, G. W. Mc- 
Coy, Washington, D. C. ; Vice Chairman, L. G. Rowntree, 
Minneapolis; Secretary, Gary Eggleston, 412 West End 
Ave., New York. 



Attention ! 



Doctors and Dentists 

PROGRESSIVE ACCOUNTING 
SERVICE 

Singer Building 1011 Canal Street 

New Orleans, La, 

Bookkeeping by Machinery. Small Sets our Specialty 

Phone Main 5789 and we will explain our System 



Pathology mid Physiology — Chairman, Howard T. Kars- 
ner, Cleveland; Secretary, J. J. Moore, 5636 Drexel Ave., 
Chicago. 

Stomatology — Chairman, Vilray P. Blair, St. Louis; Vice 
Chairman, Henry S. Dunning, New York; Secretary Arthur 
D. Black, 122 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago. I 

. Nervous and Mental Diseases — Chairman, Elmer E. II 

Southard, Boston; Vice Chairman, Arthur S. Hamilton, I 

Minneapolis; Secretary, Charles W. Hitchcock, 1501 David 
Whitney Bldg., Detroit. 

Dermatology — Chairman, Oliver S. Ormsby, €Mcago; 
Vice Chairman, John E. Lane, New Haven, Conn. ; Secre- 
tary, Walter J. Highman, 780 Madison Ave., New York. 

Preventive Medicine and Public Health — Chairman, 
James A. Hayne, Columbia, S. C. ; Vice Chairman, John D. 
McLain, Harrisburg, Pa.; Secretary, Clarence D. Selby, 
Spitzer Bldg., Toledo, 0. 

Urology — Chairman, William E. Lower, Cleveland; Vice 
Chairman, Richard F. O'Neil, Boston; Secretary, E. 0. 
Smith, 19 W. Seventh St., Cincinnati. 

Orthopedic Surgery — Chairman, George W. Hawley, 
New York City; Vice Chairman, Roland Hammond, Provi- 
dence, R. L ; Secretary, H. B. Thomas, 30 N. Michigan Ave., 
Chicago. 

Gastn'o-Enterology and Protology — ^Chairman, Frank 
Smithies, Chicago; Vice Chairman, Louis J. Hirschman, 
Detroit; Secretary, Horace W. Soper, 316 Wall Bldg., St. 
Louis. 



]-! 






Belvedere Private Sanitarium 



Fronting on Mississippi River 

NEW ORLEANS 



Specializing in tlie treatment of Diseases of the Nervous 
System; functional Neuroses, Neuresthenia, Obesity 
and Nervous Exhaustion v/here rest and recuperation 
are desired. 

Pasteur treatment administered. 

Special atrention and unusual facilities for the permanent 
care of Invalids. 

Ideally situated on banks of the Mississippi River. 

Rates vary from $35.00 a week up, according to accommo- 
dations selected and the requirements in Medical At- 
tendance, Nursing and Treatment. 

DR. B. R GALLANT, Medical Director \ 

City Office: 703 Audubon Bldg., New Orleans. | 

j 

♦ 

I 

» 



NEW ORLEANS POLYCLINIC 

Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane University of Louisiana ♦ 

♦ 

I 

'-= ♦ 

Physicians will find the Polyclinic an excellent means ♦ 

for posting themselves upon progress in all branches } 

of medicine and surgery, including laboratory, cad a- i 

* veric work and the specialties. ♦ 

♦ 



For further information, address i 

CHARLES CHASSAIGNAC. M., D. Dean } 

Post Office Drawer 770 New Orleans ! 



Tulane also offers highest class education leaning to degrees in Medicine, 
Pharmacy, Dentistry, Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 



The Diagnostic Clinic 



THEODORE, J. DIMITRY, M. D. 
HAMILTON P. JONES, M.D. 
MAURICE J. GELPI, F. A. C. S. 
WALTER J. OTIS. M. D. 
B. L. GORE, D. D. S. 
and Consultants 



X-RAY AND CLINICAL LABORATORIES 

The Diagnostic Clinic is established for the purpose of furnish- 
ing to physicians without the necessary facilities, all available data in 
obscure or complicated cases. All the information necessary to make 
a diagnosis or to reach some definite conclusion is obtained in one 
building equipped for that purpose. 

It is the aim of the Clinic to procure this data with the least pos- 
sible expense and inconvenience to the patient. After the information 
obtained has been discussed by the various consultants, a complete 
w^ritten report with therapeutic suggestions is returned with the patient 
to the referring physician. A single charge is made for the combined 
examination. 

While the individuals in the Clinic practice in their Respective 
specialties, no case referred to the Clinic for diagnosis is treated with- 
out a specific request from the referring physician. ♦ 



7 he Diagnostic Clinic 

J 60 1 Prytania Street New Orleans, La. 



10 



DIRECTORY 

OF 



ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY. 



EXPLANATION. 



NEW ORLEANS PHYSICIANS. j 



Names in capitals signify membership in the Orleans Parish 
Medical Society and ipso facto in the Louisiana State Medical 
Society. 

An asterisk (*) after a name signifies that no information was 
furnished the Editor of this Directory concerning the physician men- 
tioned. 

"In Service" means that the Doctor was in active military service 
of the United States at the time this Directory went to press. 

The following abbreviations are used for local Medical Colleges: 

"Tulane" signifies "School of Medicine, Tulane University of 
Louisiana." 

"Loyola" means "Post-Graduate School of Medicine, Loyola Uni- 
versity." 

"Flint" means "Flint Medical College of New Orleans University" 
(Colored). 

The names of other colleges are either given in full or abbre- 
viated in such a way as to be easily understood. 

A. 

ADAMS, GEORGE BUNCH— Tulane 1910; Pathologist 
Charity Hospital ; Instructor in Pathology and Bacteriology, 
Tulane; Lecturer in Pathology, Graduate School of Medi- 
cine, Tulane. Office, Suite 705-709 Maison Blanche Annex; 
2-5; Main 752. Residence, Charity Hospital; Main 742. » 

Adams, John R. — Tulane 1888; Office and Residence, { 

317 Delaronde Street; 8-9; 2-3; Algiers 148. General prac- } 

tice. } 

ADER, HENRY FERDINAND— Tulane 1906; Professor | 

of Genito-Urinary Diseases, Loyola; Visiting Genito- } 

Urinary Surgeon, Charity Hospital. Office, 1106 Maison j 
Blanche Building ; 12-1 :30 ; 3-5 ; Main 628. Residence, 3118 



Ursuline Avenue ; Hemlock 948. Practice limited to Genito- | 

Urinary and Rectal Diseases. | 

ADIGER, DAVID— Tulane 1913; Office, 1128 Maison 1 
Blanche Building; 1-2:30; Main 2383. Residence, 1825 

Josephine Street; Jackson 720. General practice. ♦ 

Aiken, John Gayle— Tulane 1891; Office, 411 Macheca { 

Building; 11-1; Main 119. Residence, 2708 Coliseum; Jask- f 

son 119. Internal Medicine. | 

AIKEN, WILLIAM HOLCOMBE— Tulane, 1915. Resi- 

dence, 2708 Coliseum; Jackson 119. j 

ALLEN, CARROLL W.— Tulane 1901 ; Assistant Profes- j 

sor of Clinical Surgery, Tulane; Assistant Professor of I 

Clinical Anesthesia, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; ♦ 

Member Committee on Standards, American College of Sur- J 

geons. Office, 509 Macheca Building; 3-5; Main 163. Res- { 

idence, 43 Audubon Boulevard; Walnut 1069. Surgery. { 

ALLGEYER, ERNEST EMILE— Tulane 1917. Office, | 

♦ 1206 Maison Blanche; 1-2:30; Main 2324. I 
I Angell, Richard W.— Tulane, 1890 ; 2300 Baronne Street. | 
j Ansley, Charles H. — Chicago Homeopathic Medical Col- j 
j lege, Illinois, 1910. Office, 1104 Maison Blanche Building; 1 
j 10-12; 1-4. I 
I Asher, Philip— Tulane, 1897 ; Ph. G. ; M. D. ; M. S. ; Emeri- I 
j tus Professor of Chemistry, Department of Pharmacy, ! 

♦ Loyola. 912 Broadway street ; Walnut 1859-L. { 
j Aubry, Albert J. (Colored)— Flint, 1889. Residence, 822 | 

♦ Newton. } 

i „ ..!• ..„„_...!. I 



I 12-2; Algiers 575-J. 



; BABIN, ARTHUR J.— Tulane 1896 ; 276 Elmira Avenue ; | 

I 



j BACON, EDWARD FRANCIS— Tulane 1904; Office, 

j 1109 Maison Blanche Building; 12-2:30; Main 4747. Resi- 

j dence, 129 N. Scott; Galvez 152. 

♦ BAHN, CHARLES A.— Texas 1907 ; Assistant Professor | 

♦ Diseases of the Eye, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane ; | 
j Assistant Surgeon Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital; 
j Secretary Louisiana Nurses Board of Examiners. Office, 
j Suite 711-715 Maison Blanche Annex; 9-5; Main 5854. 
j Residence, 4810 Prytania Street; Uptown 3834. Practice 
j limited to Ophthalmolgy. 



IS 



j Baker, C. M. — Tulane, 1919. Interne Charity Hospital; } 

j Main 742. | 

j BALLARD, EDITH LOEBER— Bay St. Louis, Miss. } 

j BALSINGER, W. E.— University of Pennsylvania, j 

j School of Medicine, 1907. Office, 190 North Street, { 

! Chicago, 111. Plastic Surgery. " J 



j BAMBER, JAMES MONROE— Memphis Hospital Medi- 

j cal College, Tenn; 1908; Lecturer and Instructor in Medi- j 

j cine, Tulane ; Office 636 Common Street. Residence, 124 S. I 

i Bernadotte Street; Galvez 1557-J. Junior Associate in I 

♦ Medicine, Touro Infirmary. I 

Barker, William Edward— Tulane 1917; Office, 731 ♦ 

Maison Blanche Building; 12-1; Main 5562. | 

Barnes, John A: (Colored)— Flint, 1903. 617 Peniston. | 

EARNETT, JACOB— Tulane 1897; Professor of Gyne- | 

cology, Loyola ; Visiting Surgeon, Gynecological and Obstet- } 

rical Division, Charity Hospital; Visiting Gynecologist, I 

Touro Infirmary; Fellow American College of Surgeons. \ 

Office, 401 Macheca Building; 2-4; Main 3220. Residence, j 

5325 Danneel Street; Uptown 812. j 

BASS, CHARLES CASSEDY— Tulane 1899; Professor j 

of Experimental Medicine and Director of the Laboratories j 

of Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office, Hutchinson Memorial } 

Building; 9-5; Main 781. Residence, 1216 Broadway; Wal- j 

nut 1266. Practice limited to Teaching and Medical Re- j 

search. 1 

BASS, MARY ELIZABETH— Woman's Medical College 
of Pennsylvania, 1904 ; Instructor in Laboratory of Clinical 
Medicine and Instructor in Pathology and Bacteriology, 
Tulane; Assistant Professor in Clinical Laboratory Diag- 
nosis, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office and j 
residence, 3513 Prytania Street, by appointment; Uptown j 
416. Practice limited to Clinical Laboratory Diagnosis. { 

BATCHELOR, JAMES MADISON— Tulane 1895 ; Presi- I 

dent and Professor of Surgery, Loyola; Chief Surgical ♦ 

Division, Charity Hospital. Office, 1210 Maison Blanche j 

Building; 1-2:30; Main 135. Fellow American College j 

of Surgeons. Residence, 2010 State Street. Walnut 2187. j 

BATSON, THEODORE THOMAS— Tulane 1915. In- j 

structor in Gynecology and Obstetrics, Loyola; Visiting j 

Surgeon, Division of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Charity j 

♦ 



Hospital Office, 2117 Tulane a\enue, opposite Hotel Dieu; ♦ 
12-1 ; Galvez 932. Residence, 6319 Patton ; Uptown 4224. 

Bayley, Robert Augustus — Tulane, 1875. Residence, j 

1300 Louisiana Avenue. » 

BAYON, HENRY— Tulane 1888; Professor of Applied j 
Anatomy, Tulane. Office, 1215 Maison Blanche Building; j 
11:30-12:30; Main 1803. Residence, 2212 Napoleon Ave- 
nue; Uptown 3113. j 

BEATROUS, FRANK THEOPHILE— Tulane 1917. 

B. Sci. ; Visiting Surgeon, Charity Hospital. Office, 1221 j 

Maison Blanche Building; 10-11; Main 242. Residence, | 

1036 City Park Avenue; Galvez 399. Surgery. t 

BEL, GEORGE SAMUEL— Tulane 1893; Professor of { 

Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office, 409 Medical Building; { 

11-1:30; Main 2713. Residence, 1204 Napoleon Avenue; ! 

Uptown 27. j 



Bell, Thadeus Parker — University of the South, Sewanee, 



nosis and treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis. 



I 

♦ 

Tenn., 1900. Office, Maison Blanche Annex; Main 355. j 

BERANGER, EDGAR JOSEPH— Tulane 1916. Office, I 

720 Maison Blanche Building; 12-2; Main 5958. Residence, ♦ 

3816 Canal Street; Galvez 119. General practice. ♦ 

EERGE, PHILIP— Tulane 1883. Clinical Assistant in |; 

Surgery, Loyola. Office, 711 Macheca Building; 4-6; Main \\ 
19. Residence, 8136 Cohn; Walnut 502. General practice. 

BERNADAS, HECTOR EMILE— President Orleans 

Parish Medical Society; Chairman House of Delegates, |> 

Louisiana State Medical Society. Office, 308 Medical Build- j 

ing; 1:30-2:30; Main 4888. Residence, 2301 Esplanade ; 

avenue; Hemlock 502. General practice and surgery. ; 

BERNHARD, ROBERT— Tulane 1913; Lecturer and Ih- 
structor, Tulane ; Medical Officer, Charity Hospital. Office, 
509 Medical Building. Residence, 2506 Louisiana Avenue; 

Uptown 1275. I: 

BERTUCCI, EMILE AUGUSTUS— Tulane 1912 ; Charity | 

Hospital 1914. Office, 1115 Maison Blanche Building; ;; 

4:30-6; Main 3367. Residence, 1426 St. Andrew Street; ;; 

Jackson 670. Internal diseases and diagnosis. Chairman | 

of the Exhibit and Lecture Committee of the Orleans Anti- | 

Tuberculosis League, 1309 Tulane Avenue; Visiting Physi- | 

cian Charity Hospital. Special attention given to the diag- !! 

I' 
^' 



♦ 

j BETHEA, OSCAR WALTER— Mississippi Medical Col- 

j lege, 1907; Professor of Clinical Therapeutics, Tulane. 

Office, 1203 Maison Blanche Building; 10-11; Main 199; 
also 1637 S. Carrollton Avenue; 4-7. Residence, 1735 S. 
Carrollton Avenue; Walnut 548. General practice. 

Blackman, Kay Wellborn— Tulane, 1919. Residence, 1537 
Calhoun. 

BLACKSHEAR, STEPHEN MERTLE— Tulane 1909; 
Clinical Professor of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology, 
Tulane. Office, 606 Title Guaranty Building. Residence, 
2834 St. Charles Avenue; Uptown 77. Ear, Nose and 
Throat. 

BLAKELY, RUPERT MICHUM— Tulane 1911. Office, 
509 Macheca Building; 12-1; Main 163. 

Bliss, A. S.— Pulte, 1897. Office, 1111 Maison Blanche. 
Residence, 1738 Broadway; Walnut 2449-J. 

ELOCH, EMILE— Tulane 1913 ; Clinical Assistant in Sur- 
gery, Tulane. Office, 717 Maison Blanche Building; 12-1; 
Main 2829. Residence, 7209 St. Charles Avenue ; Walnut 3. 

BLOCK, WILLIAM HENRY— University of Maryland 
1895. Office, 710 Maison Blanche Building; 3:30-5; Main 
5410. Residence, 5810 Perrier Street; Uptown 1887. In- 
ternal Medicine. 

BLOOM, CHARLES JAMES— Tulane 1912 ; Harvard P. 
G. 1915; B. Sci. ; Instructor in Pediatrics, Tulane. Office. 
3529 Prytania Street; 2-5; Uptown 816. Residence 4818 
Carondelet Street; Uptown 3417. Practice limited to Dis- 
eases of Children. 

BLOOM, HAROLD A.— Tulane, 1918. Residence, 4818 
Carondelet Street; Uptown 3417. 

BLOOM, JEFFERSON DAVIS— Tulane 1886. Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. Office, 1215 Maison 
Blanche Building; 1-3; Main 1803. Residence, 5771 St. 
Charles Avenue; Uptown 1737. 

BLUM, HENRY NATHAN— Tulane 1900 ; Instructor in 
Ophthalmology, Tulane; Fellow American College of Sur- 
geons. Office, 1211 Maison Blanche Building; 10:30-5; 
Main 2719. Residence, 1436 Webster; Uptown 525. Prac- 
tice limited to Ophthalmology. 

Blumberg, L.-^Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hospital; 
Main 742. 



21 



BODET, ROY ELMER— Tulane 1912. Office, 311 j 

Macheca Building; 11-12; Main 3953. Residence, 1121 N. j 

Dorgenois Street; Hemlock 1742-J. j 

EOEBINGER, MICHAEL PHILIP— Tnlane 1906; Ad- j 

junct Professor of Oto-Laryngology, Loyola; Visiting Oto- j 

Laryngologist, Charity Hospital and Presbyterian Hospital. j 

Member Board of Directors Orleans Parish Medical Society. j 

Office, 31 Cusachs Building; 1-4; Main 1093. Residence, j 

1700 Tchoupitoulas Street; Jackson 642. Practice limited j 

to Diseases of Ear, Nose and Throat. | 

BOHNE, PHILIP WILLIAM— Tulane 1905 ; Professor of | 

Diseases of Children, Loyola; Visiting Physician, Charity j 

Hospital. Office, Suite 620-622 Maison Blanche Building; j 

12-2; Main 873. Residence, 1722 Jackson Avenue; Jackson j 

191. General practice. j 

Bordenave, Claude Justin— Tulane 1912. Office, 305 j 

Medical Building; 12-1; Main 4215. } 

Borey, Charles A. — Tu,^.ne 1895; Professor of Pedi- | 

atrics, Loyola ; Chief Visiting Pediatrist, Charity Hospital ; |; 



Visiting Pediatrist Hotel Dieu and Presbyterian Hospital. 
Office, 727 Baronne Street; 1-4; Main 1510. Residence, 
723 Baronne Street; Main 1510. 

BORNIO, DOMINGO— University of Louisiana 1882. 
Office 904 N. Claiborne; 12-2; Hemlock 9292. Residence, 
same ; Hemlock 304. General Medicine. 

BOUDEN, MARGARET PAULINE HARRISON— 

Tulane 1919. 1217 Calhoun Street. 

Eoudousquie, Gabriel C. — University of Alabama, 1894. 
Residence, 1520 Polymina. 

BOWIE, ELEAZAR ROBINSON— Hahnemann Medical 
College and Hospital, Philadelphia, 1914; B. S. ; Tulane, 
1916; Assistant Instructor in Clinical Medicine and Radi- 
ology, Tulane. Interne, Touro Infirmary; Uptown 2684. 

ERADBURN, MUIR— Tulane 1912; B. Sci. ; Assistant 
Demonstrator in Operative Surgery, Tulane. Office, 3513 
Prytania Street; Uptown 416. Residence, 2336 Octavia 
Street; Walnut 2255. 

BRADBURN, WILLIAM PLUMMER, JR.— Tulane 
1912; Clinical Assistant in General and Abdominal Surgery, 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 3513 Pry- 



tania Street; Uptown 416. Residence, 2336 Octavia; Wal- j 

nut 2255. j 

Brady, Milo James — Tulane, 1919. Residence, 2120 } 

Canal. ♦ 

BRAUD, SIDNEY FRANCIS— Tulane 1914; Instructor ! 

in Pediatrics, Tulane. Office, 41 Cusachs Building; 3:80-5; j 

Main 5857. Residence, 48' Audubon Boulevard; Walnut 
1468. Practice limited to Diseases of Infancy and Child- 
hood. 

Braun, Otto— Tulane 1897. 1120 Baronne Street, Main 
4124-L. 
j BREAUX, THOMAS W.— Tulane 1898. Office, 711 

Macheca Building; 1-3; Main 19; Residence, 1417 Caronde- 
let Street; Jackson 2068. 



j Brennan, Lawrence Arthur James — Tulane 1918; Assist 



j ant Demonstrator in Pathology, Tulane. Office and Resi- 

{ dence, 1409 Magnolia Street; Jackson 924- J. General prac- 

{ tice. 

I BRIERRE, JOSEPH EUGENE— Tulane 1904. Office, 

I 705 Macheca Building; 4-5; Main 3101. Residence, 3238 

I De Soto Street ; Hemlock 933. General practice. 

{ Brisbane, Howard P. — University of Georgetown 1882.* 

1 BROSNAN, DANIEL SEWARD— Tulane 1901 ; Medical 

I Director Dr. Brosnan's Hospital, 220 City Park Avenue; 

♦ hours by appointment ; Galvez 379. Residence, same. Prac- 

♦ tice limited to General Surgery. 

j BROWN, CAMILLE PETER— Tulane 1912. Clinical 

I BROWN, FREDERICK TEMPLE— Tulane 1919; Clini- 

j cal Assistant in Obstetrics and Gynecology Graduate School 

j of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1218 Maison Blanche Build- 

j ing; 1-2; Main 1178. Residence, 7 Rosa Park, Uptown 

j 3862. 

i BROWN, GEORGE STEWART— Tulane 1904; Professor 

j of Pharmacy, Tulane; Secretary Orleans Anti-Tuberculosis 

I League ; Member Louisiana State Nurses Board of Examin- 

! ers. Office, 1229 Maison Blanche Building; 12-1 ; Main 920. 

I Residence, 2123 Adams Street; Walnut 1483. General 



Assistant in Gynecology, Loyola; Illinois Central Hospital, 
Lafayette and Magnolia; Main 2477. 



Practice. 



Brown, Marion Earl — Tulane 1911; Clinical Assistant in 
Medicine, Tulane. Office and Residence, Gretna, La. 

Bruning, Charles — University of the South, Sewanee 
(Tenn.) 1911.- 

ERUNS, HENRY DICKSON— Jefferson Medical College, 
Philadelphia, 1881 ; Emeritus Professor of Diseases of the 
Eye, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; Surgeon-in- 
Chief, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Office, 705 
Canal-Commercial Bank Annex, 211 Camp; Main 3979. 

Buffington, Wiley R.— Tulane, 1899. Residence, 1446 
Josephine; Jackson 1497. 

Burbridge, Leonidas. T. — (Colored) Meharry Medical Col- 
lege 1893. 5219 Constance Street. 

BURGER, OTTO JACOB— Tulane 1914; Demonstrator of 
Anatomy, Loyola School of Dentistry. Office, 1800 Maga- 
zine Street; 3-4; Jackson 9179. Residence, 1125 St. An- 
drew Street; Jackson 2489. General practice. 

Burgis Albert Frank— Tulane 1918. Office 528 Bouny 
Street, Algiers; 3-5; Algiers 23. Residence, same. General 
practice. 

BURT, THOMAS R.— Tulane 1900. Clinical Assistant 
in Pediatrics, Loyola. Office, 711 Macheca Building; 3-4; 
Main 19. Residence 2121 Baronne Street; Jackson 931. 

BURTHE, JOSEPH LEOPOLD— Tulane 1897. Office, 
305 Medical Building; 3-4; Main 4215. Residence, 5133 
St. Charles Avenue ; Uptown 1537. 

BUTTERWORTH, WILLIAM WALTON— Tulane 1894; 
Office, 501 Macheca Building; 11-4; Main 582. Residence, 
3914 Prytania Street ; Uptown 143. Practice limited to Dis- 
eases of Children. 



CAINE, ANSEL MARION— Tulane 1907; Instructor in 
Anesthesia, Tulane, Office, Cusachs Bldg; Main 5857. 

Residence, 3435 Prytania; Uptown 2935. ^ 

CAIRE, ARTHUR— Tulane 1892. Office, 401 Medical 1 

Building; 4-5:30; Main 3220. Residence, 2021 S. Carroll- I 

ton Avenue; Walnut 183. Internal Medicine. ♦ 

CALLAN, JOHN— Tulane 1884 ; Member Board of Ad- j 

ministrators, Charity Hospital. Office, 505 Macheca Build- ! 



24 



NEW ORLEANS MEDICAL AND 
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191 


New Orleans Medical and 
Surgical Journal 








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(Incorporating American Jo arnal of Tropical Diseases and Preventive Medicine) | 



Comprising all the latest news in Medicine and 
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7 

ing ; 2 :30-4 :30 ; Main 3944. Residence, 1533 Felicity ; Jack- j 

son 419. Internal Medicine. . j 

CALLAWAY, WILLIAM OTIS— Tulane 1914, In j 

service. » 

CANEPA, LOUIS— Tulane 1903.. Clinical Assisttant in j 

Pediatrics, Loyola. Office, 727 Baronne Street; Main 1510. j 

Residence, 806 Esplanade Avenue; Hemlock 162. j 

Cantu, Alfredo Alonzo— Tulane, 1916. (B. S.) Office, 
305 Medical Building; 1-2; Main 4215. Residence, 1608 
Hospital ; Hemlock 2587. 

CARTER, PHILIPS JOHN— Tulane 1912 ; Instructor in 
Clinical Obstetrics, Tulane. Office, 214 Medical Building; 
Main 5703. 

CASSEGRAIN, OCTAVE CHARLES— Tulane 1915 ; 
Clinical Assistant in Surgery, Tulane. Office, 1105 Maison 
Blanche Building; 1-2:30; Main 4454. Residence, 1936 S. 
Carrollton Avenue; Walnut 188. General practice. 

CAZENAVETTE, LIONEL— Tulane, 1897. Professor 
of Diseases of the Nervous System, Graduate School of 
Medicine, Tulane; Assistant Professor of Diseases of the 
Nervous System, School of Medicine, Tulane ; Visiting Phy- 
sician, Division of Neurology, Charity Hospital; Visiting 
Neurologist, Presbyterian Hospital. Suite 301-305 Med- 
ical Building; 11-1, 4-5; Main 4889. Residence, 1607 Gov- 
ernor Nicholls Street; Hemlock 49. Diseases of the Ner- 
vous System. 

CEFALU, VICTOR— Tulane 1919; Intern Charity Hos- 
pital ; Main 742. Residence, 4103 Canal. 

CHALARON, FRANK J.— Tulane 1892. Office, 1209 
Maison Blanche Building; 10-1; 3-5; Main 3406. Resi- 
dence, 1421 Crete; Hemlock 1067-W. Practice limited to 
Genito-Urinary and Rectal Surgery. 

CHAMBERLAIN, LEONARD C— Tulane, 1901. Profes- 
sor of Diseases of Children, Loyola; Chief of Division of 
Pediatrics, Charity Hospital; Member Louisiana State 
Board of Health. Office. 1121 Maison Blanche Building; 
4-6; Main 3377. Residence, 2203 Marengo; Uptown 1892. 
General practice. 
i CHARBONNET, LOUIS S.— Tulane 1901. Office, 1141 

! Maison Blanche Building; 11-1 ; Main 1217. Residence, 2714 

i Esplanade Avenue; Hemlock 463. 



CHASSAIGNAC, CHARLES LOUIS— Tulane 1883 ; 
Dean and Professor of Genito-Urinary and Rectal Surgery; 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; Co-Editor-in-Chief 
New Orleans Medical Journal. Office, 701 Canal-Com- 
mercial Bank Annex Building (211 Camp Street) ; 11-1 ; 
3-4; Main 3599. Residence, 1321 First Street; Jackson 43. 
Practice limited to Genito-Urinary and Rectal Surgery. 

CHAVIGNY, CHARLES NOLL— Tulane 1899. Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. Office, 1203 Maison 
Blanche Building; 11:30-1:30; Main 199. Residence, 5515 
Hurst Street; Uptown 72. 

CHETTA, FRANK— Tulane 1915. Residence 3057 St. 
Claude street. 

Chillingworth, Felix Percy — Yale University 1907; As- j 

si'stant Professor of Physiology and Pharmacology, Tulane. j 

CHISOLM, JOHN RAYMOND— Tulane, 1916. Office, j 

26 Cusachs Building; 11-1; Main 3249. Residence, 1475 j 

Calhoun. ! 



Chretien, Joseph Frank— Tulane 1890. Office, 1226 j 

Maison Blanche Building; 3-5; Main 2629. Residence, j 

1104 N. Dupre Street; Hemlock 100. General practice. j 
CIRINO, JOSEPH W.— Tulane 1902. Office and resi- < j 

dence, 1734 Prytania; Jackson 227. I 

CLARK, SAMUEL MARMADUKE DINWIDDIE— j 

Tulane 1900; Professor of Gynecology and Clinical Obstet- } 

rics, Tulane; Member Committee on Standards, American j 

College of Surgeons. Office, 42 Cusachs Building; 2-3:30; j 

Main 5857. Residence, 3222 Prytania Street; Uptown 37. | 

Clark, William Buford— University of Maryland, 1882.* j 

Clay. B. — Interne, Charity Hospital ; Main 742. j 

COCKER GEORGE F.— Tulane, 1898. Office, 720 j 

Maison Blanche Building; ,10-12; Main 5562. Residence, j 

5941 Magazine; Uptown 30. | 

COCRAM, HENRY S.— Tulane, 1891. Professor of Gyne- j 

cology and Obstetrics, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane ; j 

Fellow American College of Surgeons, Chicago, Illinois. 1 

! Office, 42 Cusachs Building; 1-2:30; Main 5857. Residence. I 

I 14 Rosa Park; Uptown 1351. I 

j COHN, ISIDORE— Tulane, 1907. Professor Clinical j 

j Surgery, Tulane; Fellow American College of Surgeons. j 

♦ ' ♦ 



Office, 1211 Maison Blanche Building; 2-4:30; Main 2719. 
Residence, 1831 Bordeaux Street; Uptown 3392. Surgery. 

COHN, SAMUEL CHARLES— Tulane 1918. Residence 
1415 Coliseum. 

Coker, Raleigh Joseph (colored) — Flint, 1909. Resi- 
dence, 1410 Dumaine. 

COLE, CHRISTIAN GRENES— Tulane, 1908, Pro- 
fessor of Surgery, Loyola ; Chief Visiting Surgeon, Charity 
Hospital; Visiting Surgeon, Hotel Dieu; Chief Visiting Sur- 
geon, Presbytp^ian Hospital; Fellow American College of 
Surgeons. Office, 1109 Maison Blanche Building; 2-4; 
Main 4747. Residence, 4938 St. Charles Avenue; Uptown 
153. 

COLE, JAMES CLIFTON— Tulane, 1909. Instructor in 
Medicine and in the Laboratories of Clinical and Tropical 
Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1208 Maison Blanche Building; 
11-12:30; Main 2324. Residence, 2118 Joliet Street; Wal- 
nut 2720. Internal Medicine and Diagnosis. 

CONN, JOSEPH— Tulane, 1897.- Office, 201 Medical 
Building; 3-5; Main 3513. Residence, 4436 St. Charles; Up- 
town 187. 

CONNOLY, EDWARD McCALLOM— Tulane, 1908. U. 
S. Public Health Service. Residence, 3116 Prytania Street. 
Office, 3439 St. Charles Avenue, corner Delachaise; 11 to 
12 and by appointment ; Uptown 565. Formerly of Bellevue 
Hospital, New York City. Practice limited to Neuro- 
psychiatry. 

Corbin, Robert Atwood — Tulane, 1914; Army Medical 
School, 1918; A. B., Columbia University (New York.) 
Office, 636 Common (Liggett Building) ; 2 to 5 and by ap- 
pointment. Residence, 802 Pine Street; Walnut 888. As- 
sistant Visiting Otologist and Laryngologist, Touro Infirm- 
ary. Proctice limited to Ear, Nose and Throat. 

Coulter, William Wallace— Tulane, 1908.* 

COURET, MAURICE JOHN— Tulane, 1896. Assistant 
Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Tulane. Resi- 
dence, 3803 Camp Street ; Uptown 3015. 

Crawford, Edward Aiken — Medical Department, Illinois 
College, Jacksonville, 111., 1911.* 

CRAWFORD, WILLIAM STERLING— Tulane, 1919. 
Intern Charity Hospital; Main 742. 



CRAWFORD, RENA— Johns Hopkins, 1915. Office and 
Residence ( 3439 St. Charles Avenue, corner Delachaise; 
2-3:30; Uptown 565. Practice limited to Diseases of Chil- 
dren. 

Crebbin, Alexander Ramsej^ — University of Michigan, 
1912. Junior Assistant Surgeon, Department of Eye, 

Touro Infirmary; Visiting Surgeon, Division of Ophthal- j 

mology. Charity Hospital. Office, 1207 Maison Blanche } 

Building ; 11-4 ; Main 4296. Residence, 8333 Panola Street ; } 

Walnut 1552-L. Practice limited to Ophthalmology. } 

CREBBIN, JOHN THOMSON— Assistant Professor | 

Diseases Ear, Nose and Throat, Graduate School of Medi- « 

cine, Tulane; Assistant Surgeon, Ear, Nose and Throat De- ♦ 

partment, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Office, j 

1207 Maison Blanche Building; 1-4; Main 4296. Resi- ♦ 

dence, 1219 Short; Walnut 1276. Practice limited to Dis- } 

eases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. President Louisiana } 

Nurses Board of Examiners. j 

CRICHLOW, RICHARD SMITH— Tulane, 1917. In- | 

structor in Anatomy, Tulane. Residence, 7037 Freret ; Wal- ♦ 

nut 1485. Office, 43 Cusachs Bldg ; 12-1 :30 ; Main 6071. I 

CRONAN, GEORGE AUGUSTUS— Tulane, 1914. In- } 

structor in Obstetrics, Loyola. Office, 1229 Maison Blanche j 

Building; 4-5; Main 920. Residence, 4222 Constance; Up- j 

town 4889. j 

Cross, A. B. — Resident Surgeon, Eye, Ear, Nose and j 

Throat Hospital, Elk Place and South Basin: Main 347. | 

Residence, Crowley, La. ♦ 

♦ 



D. 



DABNEY, THOMAS SMITH— Tulane, 1879. Residence, j 

618 Napoleon Avenue; Uptown 694. Honorary Member j 

Orleans Parish Medical Society. } 

DANNA, JOSEPH A.— Tulane, 1901. Secretary and Pro- j 

fessor of Surgery, Loyola ; Chief Visiting Surgeon, Charity | 

Hospital ; Visiting Surgeon, Hotel Dieu ; Professor of Prin- i 

ciples of Surgery, Loyola School of Dentistry. Office, 1128 ♦ 

Maison Blanche Building; 12-2; Main 2383. Residence, j 

1562 North Miro; Hemlock 466. } 

D'AQUIN, JOHN JOSEPH— Tulane, 1892. Office, 1310 j 

Whitney-Central Bank Building; 1 :30-3 ; Main 3326. Resi- { 

♦ 

29 






dence, 1660 Robert Street; Uptown 23. Internal Medicine. 
DASPIT, HENRY. JR.— Tulane, 1907. Assistant Pro- 
fessor of Diseases of the Nervous System, Tulane ; Visiting 

j Neurologist, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Office, 

415 Medical Building; 3-5; Main 4412. Residence, 2235 

! Carondelet Street; Jackson 498. Practice limited to Neu- 

j rology and Psychiatry. 

I D'AUNOY, JOSEPH RIGNEY— Tulane, 1913. B. Sc; 

I Demonstrator in Pathology, Tulane; Assistant Pathologist, 

I Charity Hospital ; Main 742. Office, 1226 Maison Blanche 

j Building; 4-5 M;ain 2629. Residence, 1935 Ursuline; 

♦ Hemlock 1964. 

I DAUTERIVE, HENRY JOSEPH— Tulane, 1910. In- 

structor in Orthopedics, Loyola. Office, 621 Macheca 

i Building; 10-12; Main 4596. Residence, 1206 Peters Ave- 

nue; Uptown 1579. General and Orthopedic Surgery. 

DAVIS, ROBERT A.— University of Tennessee, Mem- 
} phis, 1904. Clinical Assistant in Ophthalmology, Tulane. 

j Office, 515 Medical Building. Practice limited to Oph- 

j thalmology. 

j Davis, R. B. — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hospital; 

! Main 742. 

♦ 

j DeBERGUE, EDWARD JOSEPH— Tulane, 1908. As- 

I sistant Coroner, City of New Orleans, Tulane Avenue and S. 

i Franklin Street; Main 148. Office, 1109 Maison Blanche 

! Building; 10-12; Main 4747. Residence, 2024 Carondelet; 

I Jackson 349. 

i DeBUYS, LAWRENCE RICHARD— Tulane, 1904. Pro- 

j fessor of Pediatrics, Tulane. Office, 1122 Maison Blanche j 

j Building; by appointment; Main 954. Residence, 1776 j 

j State; Walnut 213. j 

I DeGRANGE, JOSEPH T.— Tulane, 1888. Office, 415 | 

I Macheca Building; 10-12; Main 430. Residence, 1636 Gen- j 

I eral Pershing Street ; Uptown 2755. General Practice. I 

j Dejoie, Paul H. V. (Colored)— Flint, 1895. Residence, 

j 1131 Dufossatt; Uptown 1128. I 

I DELAUP, SIDNEY PHILIP— Tulane, 1890. Professor of j 

Surgery of the Genito-Urinary Organs and Rectum, Grad- 
uate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 201 Medical Build- 
ing; 12-2:30; Main 3513. Residence, 1120 Esplanade Ave- 



i GEORGE AUGUSTIN MRS. WALTER TALLANT 

I Manager Sec'ty-Treasurer 

I - LUIS MEJIA, Translator 



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nue; Hemlock 156. Practice limited to Genito-Urinary and 
Rectal Surgery. 

DEMPSEY, J. GEORGE— Tulane, 1899. Professor of 
Phthisiology, Loyola; Chief visiting physician to Breaux 
l^uilding, Tuberculosis Division, Charity Hospital; Chief 
Tuberculosis Bureau, Louisiana State Board of Health. 
Office, 702 Macheca Building; 12-2 ; Main 3454. Residence, 
942 Jackson Avenue; Jackson 1454. Special attention to 
Tuberculosis. 

DE POORTER LLEVIN— Tulane, 1898. Professor of 
Clinical Rhinology and Laryngology, Loyola; Visiting Sur- 
geon, Ear, Nose and Throat Department, Charity Hospital ; 
Visiting Oto-Laryngologist, Hotel Dieu ; Associate Professor 
of Oral Surgery, Loyola. Office, 208 Medical Building; 
11-1, 3-5; Main 1043. Residence, 525 Lowerline Street; 
Walnut 773. Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose 
and Throat. 

DEEROFEN, J. C— Tulane, 1899. Office and Residence, 
1525 Melpomene Street. 

DE REYNA, GEORGE JOSEPH— Tulane, 1917. Clinical 
Assistant in Pediatrics, Tulane. Uptown Office, 3529 Pry- 
tania, opposite Touro Infirmary; 1-2; Uptown 191. Down- 
town Office, 930 Louisa ; 3-5 ; Hemlock 144. Sunday hours 
by appointment. Residence, 1224 North Claiborne; Hem- 
lock 111. Practice limited to Diseases of Infancy and Chil- 
dren. 

De Toledo, Bernado — Medical College of Barcelona, 
Spain.* 

DE VERGES, PHILIP CAJETAN— Tulane, 1903. Of- 
fice, 319 Macheca Building; 2-4; Main 2415. Residence, 
4318 Canal Street; Galvez 114. Internal Medicine. 

DEVRON, JOHN A.— Tulane, 1896. Office, 1300 Canal 
Street; 4-6; Main 1790. Residence, 139 N. Solomon Street; 
Gavez 147. Urology. No agents allowed at office. 

DICKS, JOHN FLEMMING— Tulane, 1912. Lecturer 
and Instructor in Gynecology, Tulane. Office, 815 Whit- 
ney-Central Bank Building; 1-3; Main 2015. Residence, 
15 Audubon Boulevard ; Walnut 2087. Obstetrics and Gyne- 
cology. 

Dillman, James A. — Tulane, 1919. Presbyterian Hos- 
pital. 



DIMITRY, THEODORE J.— Tulane, 1901. Professor of 
Ophthalmology, Loyola; Chief Visiting Ophthalmologist, 
Charity Hospital; Consulting Ophthalmologist, Dispensary 
for Women and Children; Third Vice-President, Louisiana 
State Medical Society; Ophthalmologist and Chairman of 
Board, Diagnostic Clinic. Office and residence. Diagnostic 
Clinic Building, 3601 Prytania Street, opposite Touro In- 
firmary; 1-5; Uptown 2096. Practice limited to Opthal- 
mology. I 

Donaster, John James, Jr. — Loyola, 1915. Office, 833 N. J 

Claiborne Avenue; 4-5; Hemlock 9439. Residence, 1912 | 

Bienville Street; Galvez 542. General Surgery. } 

DORRESTEIN. C. A. M.— Tulane, 1897. Professor of I 

Clinical Gynecology, Loyola ; Visiting Surgeon, Gynecologic- i 

al and Obstetrical Division, Charity Hospital; Junior in ♦ 

Gynecological Service, Touro Infirmary. Office, 1226 ♦ 

Maison Blanche Building; 3-4:30; Main 2629. Residence, { 

7726 Jeannette ; Walnut 1244. ♦ 



Dowling, Oscar — President Louisiana Board of Health, } 

Conti and Royal Streets; Main 612; Professor of Public { 

Health, Tulane. Residence, 1402 Peters Avenue. » 

Dreifus, Emanuel— Tulane, 1876. Office, 1111 Maison { 

Blanche Building; 12-2; Main 1547. Residence, 1409 Ca- { 

rondelet; Jackson 1024. ♦ 

DUBOS, LOUIS JOSEPH, JR.— Tulane, 1915. Instruc- { 

tor in Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1203 Maison { 

Blanche Building; 12-1:30; Main 199. Residence, 7503 St. i 

Charles Avenue; Walnut 1107. Internal Medicine. | 

Duggan, M. Linus— Tulane, 1899. Residence, 3938 Ca- j 

nal; Galvez 300. | 

Duggan, Timothy A. — Tulane, 1892, Residence, 4153 { 

Canal; Galvez 483. ! 

Duncan, Arnott Kell— Tulane, 1912. Office, 3521 Pry- | 

tania; Uptow^n 4693. Residence, 1210 Peniston. j 

DUNN, JAMES FREDERICK— Tulane, 1908. Office, | 

711 Macheca Building; 2-3:30; Main 19. Residence, 5332 j 

Magazine Street; Uptown 1805. General Practice. | 

Dunn, John Sylvester— Tulane, 1908. Office, 821 Maison { 

Blanche Annex; 9:30-12, 1-4. Ear, Nose and Throat. I 

DUPAQUIER, EDOUARD MICHEL— Faculte de Mede- { 



33 



cine (Paris), 1885. Office, 339 Bourbon Street; 9-11, 2-4; 
Main 1978. Residence, 7719 S. Claiborne Street; Walnut 
2363. General Practice. 

DUPUY, HOMER— Vice President and Professor of 
Laryngology and Rhinology, Loyola; Chief Visiting Sur- 
geon Ear, Nose and Throat Division, Charity Hospital ; Vis- 
iting Oto-Larynologist, Dispensary for Women and Chil- 
dren; Professor of Oral Surgery, Loyola School of Dentis- 
try; Councillor Second Congressional District, Louisiana 
State Medical Society. Office, 208 Medical Building; 
12-5; Main 1043. Residence, 1658 Valmont Street; Up- 
town 1897. Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose 
and Throat. 

DUPUY, JULES E.— Tulane, 1919. Intern, Charity 
Hospital; Main 742. 

DUREL, WALLACE J.— Tulane, 1897, Medical Direc- 
tor The Dradom Sanitorium, Covington, La.; Professor of 
Phthisiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Of- 
fice, 312 Medical Building; 1-3; Main 3416. Residence. 
5508 Chestnut. Diseases of the Lungs. 

DUVAL, CHARLES WARREN— University of Pennsyl- 
vania, 1903. Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Tu- 
lane; Director Pathological Department, Charity Hospital; 
Main 742; Visiting Pathologist Touro Infirmary. Resi- 
dence, 8 Richmond Place. 

DYER, ISADORE— Yale, Ph. B., 1887; Tulane, M. D., 
1889. Dean and Professor of Diseases of the Skin, Tu- 
lane; Co-Editor-in-Chief New Orleans Medical and Surgical 
Journal; Consulting Dermatologist, Eye, Ear, Nose and 
Throat Hospital. Office, 303 Medical Building; 2-4; Main 
4889. Residence, 2222 Prytania Street. Practice limited 
to Diseases of the Skin.. 

E. 

Easter, B. F. (Colored) — Meharry Medical College, Nash- 
ville, 1903*. 

Edler, William — Scientific Assistant U. S. P. H. Serv- 
ice, Bureau Venereal Diseases, Louisiana State Board of 
Health. Office, New Court House Building, Conti and 
Royal; Main 612. 

Edrington, Edward Kuntz — Vanderbilt University, 
Nashville, Tenn., 1916. In service. 



34 



The Radium Institute 

OF NEW ORLEANS 

In Connection With 

TOURO INFIRMARY 

DIRECTING BOARD 

DR. S. M. D. CLARK DR. H. S. COCRAM DR. W. KOHLMANN 

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ylll Ctrrespondence Should be Addressed to the Radium Institute 




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33 



Ehlert, William— Tulane, 1900. Residence, 1500 Caron- 
delet. 

EHLINGER, RANGIER BURT— B. Sc, Texas A. and M., 
1913; Tulane, 1919. Demonstrator in Pathology, Tulane; 
Admitting Officer, Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

ELLIOTT, JOHN BARNWELL, Sr.— Medical College of 
South Carolina, 1867. Emeritus Professor of the Theory 
and Practice of Medicine, Tulane; Honorary Member Or- 
leans Parish Medical Society. Residence, Highlands, N. C. 

ELLIOTT, JOHN BARNWELL, Jr.— Tulane, 1894. Pro- 
fessor of Theory and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical 
Medicine, Tulane; Consulting Physician, Eye, Ear, Nose 
and Throat Hospital. Office, Suite 801-805 Maison Blanche 
Annex; Mondays and Fridays, 9-4; Tuesdays, Wednesdays 
and Thursdays, 1-6. No office hours on Saturdays or Sun- 
days; Main 3456. Residence, 1423 Louisiana Avenue; Up- 
town 24. Practice limited to Internal Medicine and Consul- 
tations. 

Ellis, John Hamilton — Tulane, 1888. Clinical Assistant 
in Surgery, Loyola; State Registrar of Vital Statistics, Lou- 
isiana State Board of Health. Office, 1210 Maison Blanche 
: Building; 3-5; Main -135. 

I ELSON, LEO NEHEMIAH— Tulane, 1914. Office, 412 

j Medical Building; 10-12; Main 1541. Residence, 1801 

Third Street; Jackson 1034. Internal Medicine. 

ERNST, OLIVER FORSTER— Tulane, 1897. Office, 
1226 Maison Blanche Building; 1:30-3:30; Main 2629. 
Residence, 911 State Street; Uptown 1259. General prac- 
tice. 

Escalente, Emilo E. — ^Tulane, 1913; A. B.; Professor of 
Dental Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Loyola; Superin- 
tendent of Laboratories at Clinic of Dr. J. T. Nix; Visiting 
Internist, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Office, 1407 
South Carrollton Avenue; 10-7; Walnut 165. Residence, 
1720 Foucher. Practice limited to Laboratory Work. 

ESHLEMAN, CHARLES LEVERICH— A. B.; Tulane, 
1904. Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine, Tulane. 
Office, 606 Maison Blanche Building; 1-3 and by appoint- 
ment; Main 2841. Residence, 4919 Carondelet Street. 
Practice limited to Internal Medicine and Diagnosis. 

36 



ESTOPINAL, JOSEPH ALCIBIADES— Tulane, 1899. j 

Professor of Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat, Loyola ; } 

Chief of Division of Laryngology and Rhinology, Charity j 

Hospital; Visiting Laryngologist, Illinois Central Hospital. 
Office, 314 Medical Building; 1-5; Main 5372. Residence, 
310 Angela ; Hemlock 2175. Practice limited to Diseases of 
the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

EUSTIS, ALLAN CHOTARD— Tulane, 1903. Office, 
3621 Prytania Street, near Touro Infirmary; hours by ap- 
pointment; Uptown 84. Residence, 1518 Webster Street; 
Uptown 676. Practice limited to Office Consultation (In- | 

ternal Medicine) and Institutional Work. | 

^ ! 

FAIVRE, GEORGE WILLIAM— Tulane, 1909= Office, | 

1226 Maison Blanche Building; 11-12; Main 2629. Resi- | 

dence, 2816 Magazine; Uptown 875. General Practice. j 

FEINGOLD, MARCUS— University of Vienna, 1896. i 

Fellow American College of Surgeons; Professor of Oph- } 

thalmolog^^ Tulane. Office and residence, 4206 St. j 

Charles Avenue; 1-4; Uptown 133. Practice limited to j; 
Ophthalmology. 

FENNER, ERASMUS DARWIN— Tulane, 1892. Pro- 
fessor of Orthopedics and Surgical Diseases of Children, 
Tulane. Office and residence, 1915 St. Charles Avenue; 

2-4 ; Jackson 47. Orthopedic Surgery and Diseases of Chil- \'> 

dren. i 

FENNO, FREDERICK LEONARD— Tulane, 1917. Res- ; 

dence, 2211 Marengo. Office, 1121 Maison Blanche. 

Ferran, Jr., John Blaise — Tulane, 1916. Office, 702 
Macheco Building. 

FICKLEN, EDWARD ALEXANDER— Tulane, 1911. |: 

Secretary Orleans Parish Medical Society, 141 Elk Place; 
Main 1514. Office, 621 Macheco Building; 10-12; Main 
4596 ; also 724 Baronne ; by appointment ; Main 5565. Resi- 
dence, 1437 Calhoun; Uptown 640. Surgery. I 

Ford, Nell Elizabeth— Tulane, 1919. Residence. 1502 n 

South Carrollton Avenue. J 

FORTIER, LUCIEN AMEDEE— Tulane, 1912. Clinical 
Assistant in Surgery, Tulane; Roentgenologist, Hotel Dieu. 



37 



r 
I 

j Office, Hotel Dieu ; 9-3 ; Galvez 1300. Residence, 5008 Mag- 

j azine Street; Uptown 1539. Practice limited to Roentgen- 

{ ology. 

I FOSSIER, ALBERT EMILE— Tulane. 1902. Professor 

j of Medical Diagnosis, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane ; 

j Chairman Committee on Arrangements, 1920 Meeting 

j American Medical Association (New Orleans, April 26-30, 

j 1920). Office, 1216 Maison Blanche Building; hours by 

j appointment; Main 5214. Practice limited to Internal 

I Medicine. 

! Frederick, Rivers (colored) — University of Illinois, 1897. 

I 4120 Clara. 

I FRIEDRICHS, ANDREW GAIENNIE— Charity Hos- 

♦ pital Medical College, 1877. Office, 825 Maison Blanche 
j Building; 10-5; Main 2249. Residence, Metairie Ridge; 
j Walnut 320. Practice limited to Oral Surgery. 

I FRIEDRICHS, ANDREW VALLOIS— Tulane, 1917. As- 

j sistant Demonstrator in Pathology, Tulane ; Assistant in 

j Pathology, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 

j 1201 Maison Blanche Building; hours by appointm.ent ; 

I Main 2321. 

j FRIEDRICHS, EPHRAIM DENEUFBOURG — Tulane, 

I 1900. Instructor in Clinical Obstetrics, Tulane; Lecturer 

I and Assistant in Clinical Surgery. Graduate School of Medi 

} cine, Tulane. Office and residence, 474 Pine Street; 1-3; 

{ Walnut 340. 

I FUCHS, VALENTINE HENRY— Tulane, 1917. Office, 

I 410 Medical Building; 11-1 and by appointment; Main 29. 

} Residence, 2125 Bell ; Hemlock 832. Practice limited to Dis- 

♦ eases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

j Fuller, Ray Thomas — Saginaw Medical College, Michi- 

j gan, 1903. Office, 602 Canal-Commercial Bank Annex, 

I 211 Camp Street; 1:30-3:30; Main 5361. Residence, 1727 

} Valence Street; Uptown 1081. 

! G. 



GABERT, HUGO A.— Tulane, 1879. 1023 N. Rampart 
Street; 8-9, 2-4; Hemlock 190. 
Gage, Alfred— Tulane, 1918.* 
GAGE, IDYS MIMS— Tulane, 1917. Clinical Assistant 



-*»****t 



! 

in Surgery, Tulane. Interne, Touro Infirmary. Residence, j 

3705 St. Charles. 

Gale, William F.* 

GALLANT, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN— College of Physi 

cians and Surgeons, Baltimore, 1912. Office, Suite 705-709 I 

Maison Blanche Annex; 3-4; Main 5798. Residence, 11 j 

Rosa Park; Uptown 490. Medical Director Belvedere Pri- { 

vate Sanitarium, Flood Street and the River; Hemlock 316. } 

Consulting Psychiatrist, Charity Hospital, New Orleans. j 
Practice limited to Diseases of the Nervous System. 

Garrett, James Franklin (colored) — Meharry Medical 
College, 1898. 929 N. Caiborne Street. 

Gateley, S. T. — Residence, 4737 Canal. By appointment. 

Gaudet, L. S. — ^Resident Surgeon, Eye, Ear, Nose and 
Throat Hospital, 165 Elk Place; Main 347. 

GEISMAR, SIMON— Tulane, 1911. Instructor in Clin- 
ical Surgery, Tulane. Office, 1104 Maison Blanche Build- 
ing; 3-4:30; Main 2612. Residence, 1539 Louisiana Ave- 
nue; Uptown 687. Surgery. 

GELBKE, CHARLES F.— Tulane, 1900. Office, 710 
Maison Blanche Building; 1:30-3; Main 5410. Residence, 
corner Lavoisier and Third, Gretna La. (opposite New Or- 
leans) ; Algiers 61. 

GELPI, MAURICE JOSEPH— A. B., Georgetown, 1905; 
M. D., Tulane,. 1909. House Surgeon, Charity Hospital; 
Fellow American College of Surgeons; Professor of Sur- 
gery, Loyola; Diagnostic Surgeon to Diagnostic Clinic. 
Office, Diagnostic Clinic Building, 3601 Prytania Street; 
hours by appointment ; Uptown 4564. Residence, 3720 Ca- 
nal Street; Galvez 226. Practice limited to Surgery and 
Gynecology. 

GELPI, PAUL JOSEPH— Tulane, 1896. Professor of 
Genito-Urinary Diseases and Cystoscopy, Graduate School 
of Medicine, Tulane ; Medical Inspector, Health Department, 
City of New Orleans; Councillor First Congressional Dis- 
trict, Louisiana State Medical Society. Office, 802 Maison 
Blanche Annex; 2-4; Main 3448. Residence, 1700 Espla- 
nade Avenue; Hemlock 240.. Practice limited to Genito- 
Urinary and Rectal Diseases. 



39 



GENELLA, LOUIS JULIAN— A. B., LL. B.- Tulane, 
1898. Special Instructor in Physiology, Loyola School of 
Dentistry. Office and residence, 8018 Panola; 2-4, 6-7; 
Walnut 1096. General Medicine. 

GESSNER, HERMAN BERTRAM— Tulane, 1895. Pro- 
fessor of Operative Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Tulane; 
Fellow American College of Surgeons. Office, 1105 Maison 
Blanche Building; 12:30-2; Main 4454. Residence, 119 
Audubon Boulevard; Walnut 1053. Practice limited to 
Surgery. , , , 

GILBERT, WILLIAM J.— Barnes Medical College, St. 
Louis, Mo., 1898. Residence, 2312 Canal; Galvez 129. 

GILES, UPTON W.— Tulane, 1916. Clinical Assistant in 
Dietetics and Nutrition, Graduate School of Medicine, Tu- 
lane. 

Gill, Howard Lawrence — College of Physicians and Sur- 
geons, New York, 1894. Magazine, near Seventh, Wendt's 
Drug Store, 10-11 ; Dante and Oak Streets, 12-1. Residence, 
4421 South Derbigny; Uptown 1525. General Practice. 

GILLASPIE, WILLIAM AUGUSTUS— University of 
Missouri, 1896 ; Tulane, 1900. Office, 509 Macheca Build- 
ing; 1-3; Main 163. Residence, 2133 Tulane Avenue; Gal- 
vez 66. 

GLADDEN, ADDLEY HOGAN, JR.— A. B., Tulane, 
1911; M. D., Tulane, 1915. Clinical Assistant in Gyne- 
cology, Tulane. Office, 815 Whitney-Central Bank Build- 
ing; 3-4; Main 2106. Residence, 6027 Pitt; Uptown 296. 
Visiting Gynecologist, Charity Hospital. 

Glenk, Clara T. — Woman's Medical College, Pennsylva- 
nia, 1896. 2123 Peters Avenue. 

Godchaux, Paul M. — Hospital College of Medicine, Louis- 
ville, Ky., 1906.* 

GOMILA, FRANK RAYMOND— Tulane, 1908. Secre- 
tary and Sanitary Inspector, Board of Health, City of New 
Orleans ; Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 505 Macheca 
Building; 12-1; Main 3944. Residence, 911 St. Ferdinand; 
Hemlock 310. General Practice. 

GONDOLF, HAROLD JOSEPH— Tulane, 1913. Instruc 
tor in Laboratory of Clinical Medicine and Assistant in Med- 



40 



! i 

} icine, Tulane. Office, 1226 Maison Blanche Building; 1-2; j 

I Main 2629. j 

GRAFFAGNINO, PETER— Tulane, 1912. Assistant In- j 

structor in Gynecology, Tulane; Clinical Assistant in Ob- I 

stetrics and Gynecology, Graduate School of Medicine, Tu- j 

lane. Office, 731 Maison Blanche Building; Main 5562. j 

Residence, 731 North Carrollton Avenue; Galvez 267. Gen- || 

eral Practice. 

GRANER, EDWIN JACKSON— Tulane, 1887. Office \ 

and residence, 1633 First; Jackson 333. I 

GRANGER, AMEDEE— Tulane, 1901. Professor of Ra- | 

diology. Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1212 || 

Maison Blanche Building; 1-4; Main 177. Residence, 1641 
Amelia; Uptown 176. Practice limited to Radiology and 
Electrotherapeutics. 

GRAVES, WILLIAM EARI.— Tulane, 1912. Office, I 

1801 Magazine; 8-9 A. M.; Jackson 9135. Residence, 4838 i 

Magazine ; Uptown 880. General Medicine. 

Gray, C. F.* | 



Graham, R. E* 

Graybill, Jacob D. (Homeopath) — Pulte Medical College, II 

Cincinnati, Ohio, 1878. Residence, 1317 Napoleon Avenue. I 

Green, Samuel C (colored)— Flint, 1903. Residence 1227 | 

Teche Street. m 



GUTHRIE, JAMES BIRNEY— Tulane, 1900. Professor 
of Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1206 Maison Blanche || 

Building; 1:30-3; Main 2324. Residence, 1628 State; Wal- 
nut 297. Practice limited to Internal Medicine and Di- 



agnosis. !! 

H. :: 

Hackett, Robert Kells. — Tulane. Died at San Francisco, | 

Cal., January 1, 1920. I 

Hall, Harry Doyle — ^Tulane. Moved to Humphrey, La. I 
HALSEY, JOHN TAYLOR— Columbia University Col- 



lege of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, 1893. Pro- ; 

fessor of Pharmacology, Therapeutics and Clinical Medi- 
cine, Tulane; Professor of Clinical Therapeutics, Graduate 
School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1203 Maison Blanche 
Building; 1:30-3:30; Main 199. Residence, 1406 Seventh; 
Uptown 2292. 



41 






Hamilton, W. S.* 
} Hannemann, Louis M. — Tulane,1891. Residence, 2832 

} Grand Route St. John ; Hemlock 1083. 

I Hardenstein, Frank Helion (Homeopath) — Hahemann 

I Medical College and Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., 1908. Of- 

fice, Macheca Building; Main 4187. Residence 1737 Mi- 
j Ian ; Uptown 503. 

{ Hardin, Joseph A. (colored) — Flint, 1904. 

i HARNEY, JAMES BARKER— Chicago College of M. 

! and S., Chicago, 111., 1915. Radiologist, Charity Hospital. 

I HARRIS, WILLIAM HERBERT— Tulane, 1907. Assist- 

j ant Professor of Pathology, Tulane; Professor of Pathol- 

} ogy. Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1201 

} Maison Blanche Building; 10-12, 1-5, and by appointment; 

i Main 2723. Residence, 7011 Broad Place; Walnut 1343. 

( Practice limited to Laboratory Diagnosis. 

} HARRISON, ROY BERTRAND— Tulane, 1912. Clin- 

j ical Assistant in Surgery, Tulane. Office, 1201 Maison 

I Blanche Building; Main 2321. Residence, 2327 Napoleon 

Avenue; Uptown 2389. 

Hart, John B.— Tulane, 1886. Office, 711 Macheca Build- 
ing; 1-2; Main 19. Residence, 4027 Prytania ; Uptown 3683; 

Hartley, Frank James — Tulane, 1904. Office and resi- 
dence, 730 Clouet; 8-10 A. M., 3-5 P. M.; Hemlock 471. Gen- 
eral practice. 

HARZ, JOHN GEORGE— Tulane, 1904. Clinical Assist- 
ant in Surgery, Loyola. Office and residence, 500 Nash- 
ville avenue, corner Laurel; morning consultations until 
8 :30 ; afternoon, 4-5 ; Uptoyn 1656. General practice. 

HASPEL, M. DAVID— Tulane, 1905. Office, 1214 
Maison Blanche Building; 9-12, 1:30-5; Sundays, 9:30- 
10:30; Main 3095. Residence, 1824 Robert; Uptown 3368. 
Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

HATCH, EDWARD SPARBAWK— Harvard, 1899. Of- 
fice, 1126 Maison Blanche Building; 3-5 and by appoint- 
ment; Main 4264. Residence, 1437 South Carrollton Ave- 
nue; Walnut 94. Fellow American College of Surgeons. 
Practice limited to Orthopedic Surgery. 

HAUER, GEORGE JOSEPH— Tulane, 1912. Clinical 



42 



Assistant in Gynecologj', Loyola. Office, 1115 Maison 
Blanche Building; 3-4:30; Main 3367. Residence, 2502 
Peniston ; Uptown 3069. Gynecology and Obstetrics. 

HAUSER, GEORGE H.— Tulane, 1915. Adjunct Pro- 
fessor of Pathology and Clinical Microscopy, Loyola ; Assist- 
ant Bacteriologist, City Board of Health ; Professor of Bac- 
teriology, Loyola School of Dentistry; Clinical Assistant in 
Surgery, Loyola. Office, 505 Macheca Building; 11-12; 
Main 3944. Residence, 3628 St. Claude ; Hemlock 780. 

Hava, Adrian — Tulane, 1884. Office, Macheca Building. 

Hava, Francis C. — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hos- 
pital; Main 742. 

HAYES , WILLIAM McLEOD— Tulane, 1910. Office, 
105 Chartres Street; 3-4; Main 674. Residence, 1525 Cal- 
liope; Main 3812. 

Heath, T. Restin — Medico-Chirugical College, Kansas 
Cit}^ 1905. Superintendent Flint-Goodrich Hospital. Of- 
fice, 1566 Canal ; Main 1674. 

HEBERT, AYNAUD FOSTER— Tulane. 1916. Office, 
1121 Maison Blanche Building; 12-1; Main 3377. Resi- 
dence, 1707 Robert; Uptown 1068. Visiting Surgeon, New 
Orleans Dispensary for Women and Children; Visiting 
Surgeon, Outdoor Clinic, Charity Hospital. 

HEBERT, JOSEPH SECOND— Tulane, 1910. Instruc- 
tor in Obstetrics, Tulane; Visiting Gynecologist and Ob- 
stetrician, Charity Hospital; Superintendent St. Joseph's 
Maternity, Magazine and Race Streets. Office, 1121 
Maison Blanche Building; 1-4; Main 3377. Residence, 1707 
Robert; Uptown 1068. Gynecology and Obstetrics and Gen- 
eral Practice. 

Heiman, Harry — Tulane, 1915. Office, 711 Macheca 
Building ; 10 :30-12 ; Main 19. Residence, 2123 N Claiborne ; 
Hemlock 1634. 

HENDERSON, JAMES A.— Tulane, 1903. In service. 

HENINGER, BENJAMIN RUFUS— Tulane, 1916. Clin- 
ical Assisitant in Medicine, Tulane. Office, 1208 Maison 
Blanche Building; 2:30-4:30; Main 2324. Residence. 5111 
Pitt; Uptown 1953. Practice limited to Internal Medicine. 

HENRIQUES, ADOLPH— Tulane, 1906. Ph. G.; Emer- 
itus Professor of Materia Medica and Physiology, Phar- 



43 



macy Department, Loyola. Instructor in Physiology and 
in Clinical Medicine and Radiology, Tulane. Office, 1201 
Maison Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 2321. Residence, 
4726 Prytania; Uptown 1941. Practice limited to X-Ray 
Diagnosis. 

Herbert, Louis Alexander — Tulane, 1915. Demonstrator 
in Pathology, Tulane. , 

Himel, Augustine J. — Tulane, 1881. Residence, 226 Bour- 
bon Street. Not in Practice. 

HIRSCH, JULIUS G.— Tulane, 1912. Instructor in Sur- 
gery, Loyola. Office, 1232 Maison Blanche Building; 
2:30-4; Main 2435. Residence, Octavia Apartments; Up- 
town 866. Surgery. 

HOBBS, ARTHUR A.— Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity 
Hospital; Main 742. 

HOEFELD , ADOLPH 0.— Tulane, 1901. Office, 732 
Maison Blanche Annex; 1-3; Main 4193. Residence, 926 
City Park Avenue; Galvez 1125. 

HOGAN, EARL A. — Northwestern University Medical 
School, Chicago. Medical Referee Equitable Life Assur- 
ance Company, 210 Hibernia Bank Building; Main 513. 

HOLBROOK, CHARLES SHUTE— Tulane, 1912. Clin- 
ical Assistant in Psychiatry, Tulane. Office, 3521 Pry- 
tania, opposite Touro Infirmary; 10-12, and by appoint- 
ment; Uptown 4683. Residence, 8206 Pritchard Place; 
Walnut 2281-W. Practice limited to Neurology and Psy- 
chiatry. 

HOLDERITH, CHARLES P.— Tulane, 1906. Adjunct 
Professor of Gynecology, Loyola; Visiting Surgeon, Gyne- 
cological and Obstetrical Division, Charity Hospital. Of- 
fice, 734 Maison Blanche Annex; 1-2:30; Main 6810. Res- 
idence, 802 Sixth Street; Uptown 1922. Practice limited to 
Surgery and Gynecology. , 

HOLT, JOSEPH JOSEPH— New Orleans School of Medi- 
cine, 1861. Ex-President Louisiana State Board of Health. 
Residence, 2311 Coliseum; Uptown 2697. Honorary Mem- 
ber "Orleans Parish Medical Society. 

HOPKINS, RALPH— A. B..; Tulane, 1899. Assistant Pro- 
fessor of Physiology, Tulane. Office, 303 Medical Build- 



44 



ing; 11-12; Main 4889. Residence, 1524 Harmony; Uptown 
502. 

Horton, Joseph Julian — University of Texas, 1918. Of- { 

fice, U. S. Naval Recruiting Station, 617 Common; Main { 

3995. Residence, 6325 South Franklin ; Walnut 2880. Prac- t 

tice limited to U. S. Navy. ! 

HOUNTHA, JOSEPH MARION— Tulane, 1910. .Ad- | 

junct Professor of Surgery, Loyola; Visiting Surgeon Char- } 

ity Hospital; Third Vice-President Orleans Parish Medical { 

Society. Office, 711 Macheca Building; 4-5; Main 19. { 

Residence, 1230 Dryades ; Jackson 1504. General Practice. { 

Howell, Franklyn Albert— Tulane, 1917.* t 

Hubertt, Joseph M.— Tulane, 1885.* j 

Huhner, Edward J.— Tulane. Office, 420 Macheca | 

Building; 4-6. | 

Huhner, George — Tulane, 1881. Residence, 1202 Camp. j 

HUME, JOHN RAYMOND— State College of P. and S., { 

Indianapolis, 1907. Clinical Assistant in Otology. Rhinolo- I 

gy and Laryngology, Tulane. Office, 1126 Maison Blanche | 
Building; Main 4264. Residence, 5521 Atlantic; Uptown 
263. Practice limited to Diseases of the Eyes, Ear, Nose 
and Throat. 

HUME, JOSEPH— Medical College of the State of South 
Carolina, 1901. Professor of Genito-Urinary and Venereal 
Diseases, Tulane; Fellow American College of Surgeons. 
Office, 724 Baronne; 1-4; Main 4049.,Residence, 1623 Sev- 
enth; Uptown 262. Practice limited to Genito-Urinary 
and Venereal Diseases. 

Hummel, Edward Morton — Tulane, 1902.* 

Humphreys, Ralph Wilberr — Tulane, 1915.* ' 

HUMPHRIES, SOLON ROBINSON— Tulane, 1910. Of- 
fice, 508 Medical Building. 

HUNTER, JOSIAH I.— Tulane, 1895. Office and resi- 
dance, 5023 Magazine ; 2-3 ; Uptown 1346. 

HYMAN, DAVID— Tulane, 1914. Office, 1229 Maison 
Blanche Building; Main 920. 

I. 

Irwin, Emmet L. — Interne, Charity Hospital; Main 742. 
IRWIN, JOHN JOSEPH— Tulane, 1917. Clinical As- 



43 



sistant in Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology, Tulane. 
Residence, 729 Second. 

Israel, Joseph Charles — Tulane, 1916. Moved to Houston, 
Texas. 
' ISAACSON, JULraS EMANUEL— Tulane, 1918. Vis- 

iting Surgeon and Instructor in Anatomy, Hotel Dieu; Vis- 
iting Obstetrician, Lying-in Hospital, St. Charles Avenue 
and Lee Circle. Office, 720 Maison Blanche Building; 3-5; 
Main 5958. Residence, 2512 Magazine; Uptown 336. Sur- 
gery and General Practice. 

J. 

Jackson, Albert Charles— Tulane. 1916.* 

JACOBS, ADOLPH— Tulane, 1912. Office, 1128 Maison 
Blanche Building; 3:30-5; Main 2383. Residence, 2636 
Napoleon Avenue ; Uptown 105. Surgery and General Prac- 
tice. 

JACOBY. ALFRED— Tulane, 1902. Fellow American 
College of Surgeons. Office, 412 Medical Building; 12-2; 
Main 1541. Residence, 4900 St. Charles Avenue; Walnut 
297. Practice limited to General Surgery. 

JAMISON, STANFORD CHAILLE— Tulane, 1912. As- 
sistant Professor of Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Librarian 
Orleans Parish Medical Society. Office, 724 Baronne; 
Main 5565. Residence, 145 South Rampart; Main 4152. 

Jannarelli, Antonio B. — Royal University of Naples, 
1882.* 

Jase, Wilson F. (colored)— Flint, 1902. 1032 Cambronne 
Street. 

JAUQUET, CLOTILDE— Woman's Medical College of 
Pennsylvania, 1904. Office and residence, 910 Peters Ave- 
nue; Uptown 316. 

JOACHIM, OTTO— University of Tennessee, 1884. Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. Office, 1207 Maison Blanche 
Building; 10-2, 1-3; Main 4296. Ear, Nose and Throat. 

JOHNS, FOSTER MATTHEW— Tulane, 1912. Assist- 
ant Professor of Medicine in the Laboratories of Clinical 
Medicine, Tulane; Treasurer Orleans Parish Medical So- 
ciety. Office, 803 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-1, 4-6; Main 



i— 



46 



3456. Residence, 200 South Cortez ; Galvez 675-W. Prac- 
tice limited to Laboratory Consultations and Diagnosis. 

Johnson, J. A. — Resident Surgeon, Eye, Ear, Nose and 
Troat Hospital, 165 Elk Place; Main 347. Residence, 
McLeansboro, Illinois. 

JOHNSON, WILLIAM MAR VYN— Birmingham Medical 
College, 1912. Office, Suite 1218-1220 Maison Blanche 
Building; 11-5; Main 1178. Residence, 1641 Amelia; Up- 
town 294. Practice limited to Diseases and Operations of 
the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

Jones, Ford Nelson (Homeopath) — University of Michi- | 

gan. Homeopathic College, Ann Arbor, 1908.* \ 

Jones, Foster Thomas (colored) — Meharry Medical Col- | 

lege, 1917. I 

JONES, HAMILTON POLK— Tulane, 1894. Instructor j 

in Clinical Medicine, Tulane; First Vice-President Orleans j 

Parish Medical Society ; Internist and Vice-President, Diag- j 

nostic Clinic. Office, biagnostic Clinic Building, Uptown j 

4564. Residence, 1524 Fourth; Jackson 2230. Practice { 

limited to Internal Medicine and Diagnosis. Hours 2-4. I 

Jones, John P.* j 

Jones, R. A. D. — Interne, Charity Hospital; Main 742. j 

JONES, WILLIAM O'DANIEL— Tulane, 1913. Clinical I 

Instructor in , Gynecology, Tulane. Office, Cusachs Bldg; j 

Main 5857. Residence, 1221 State. | 

Jumel. Allen, Jr.— Tulane, 1897.* } 

Jugelwicz, Edward Adolph— Tulane, 1903. Office, 310 I 

Medical Building; 4-6; Main 1861. Residence, Fern Apart- ♦ 

ments; Walnut 366. Gynecology and General Practice. } 

K. I 

KAHLE, PIERRE JORDA— Tulane, B. S., 1902; M. D., { 

1905. Lecturer in Surgery of the Genito-Urinary Organs { 

and Rectum. Tulane ; Fellow American College of Surgeons. I 

Office, Liggett Building, Common and St. Charles j 

Streets; 1-5; Main 2323. Residence, 1432 Esplanade Ave- } 

nue; Hemlock 867. Practice limited to Diseases of the Gen- 
ito-Urinary Organs and Abdominal Surgery. 

Karr, Henry B.— Tulane, 1919. Residence, 4104 Pry- 
tania. 



47 



r—— 



KAVANAGH, THOMAS STEPHENS— Tulane, 1901. 
Office, 1221 Maison Blanche Building; 3:30-5; Main 242. 
Residence, 2351 Magazine; Jackson 54. 

Kay, Thomas James — Tulane, 1908.* 

KEARNEY, HAROLD LESLIE— Tulane, 1915. Office, 
Suite 1101-1105 Maison Blanche Building; 2-5; Main 4454. 
Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

KEITZ, EMILE SYLVESTER— Tulane, 1906. 705 
Macheca Building; 11-2; Main 3101. Practice limited to 
Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

KEITZ, GUSTAV— Tulane, 1880. Honorary Member 
Orleans Parish Medical Society. Office, 509 Macheca 
Building; 11-1; Main 163. Residence, 2713 Dauphine; 
Hemlock 1055. 

KELLER, ALFRED ANTHONY— Tulane, 1910. Pro- 
fessor of Operative Gynecology on the Cadaver, Loyola ; Vis- 
iting Surgeon, Charity Hospital. Office, 1210 Maison 
Blanche Building; 11-12:30; Main 135. Residence, 4125 
Magazine; Uptown 117. Surgery and General Practice. 

KELLY, EDWARD STEWART— Tulane, 1897. Ex- 
Secretary Louisiana State Board of Health. Office, 1200 
Port; Hemlock 9485. Residence, 1738 St. Roch Avenue! 
Hemlock 1000. 

Kennie, Thomas L. — Tulane, 1919. Residence, 496 Au- 
dubon Street. 

KERLIN, WILLIAM SAMUEL— Moved to Shreveport, 
Louisiana. 

KINBERGER, FRANK JAMES— Instructor in Pedia- 
trics, Tulane. Office, Liggett Building, corner St. Charles 
and Common Streets; 12-1:30; Main 2323. Residence, 4921 
Camp; Uptown 2725. Practice limited to Diseases of In- 
fancy and Childhood. 

KING, ALFRED C— Tulane, 1895. Assistant Professor 
in General Abdominal Surgery, Graduate School of Medi- 
cine, Tulane. Office and residence, 205 Vallette (Algiers) ; 
3-4; Algiers 41. 

KING, EDWARD LACY— Tulane, 1911. Instructor in 
Obstetrics, Tulane; Visiting Physician, Division of Gyne- 
cology and Obstetrics, Charity Hospital; Assistant in Opera- 



48 



tive Gynecology on the Cadaver, Graduate School of Medi- 
cine, Tulane. Office, 1201 Maison Blanche Building; 1-3; 
Main 2321. Residence, 821 Robert; Uptown 3438. Gyne- 
cology and Obstetrics and General Practice. 

King, Howard D.* | 

King, Thomas James — Tulane, 1908.* } 

KIRN, THEODORE FRANK— Clinical Assistant in Sur- j 

gery, Tulane. Office, 412 Medical Building; 2-3:30; Main j 

1541. Residence. 3304 Cleveland Avenue; Galvez 1378. | 

vreneral Practice. ♦ 

Klebs, Theodore A. — Charity Hospital Medical College, j 

1876.* I 

Knipmeyer, W. W. — Interne, Charity Hospital; Main | 

742. { 

KOELLE, JOHN MARCUS— Tulane, 1901. Office, | 

Bijou Pharmacy, South Franklin and Canal; 12-1; Main } 

1790. Residence, 1624 Allen; Hemlock 421. | 

Knobloch, Nims Philip— Tulane, 1893.* { 

KNOLLE, WILKES ADAMS— Tulane, 1919. Interne, | 

Touro Infirmary; Uptown 2684. Residence, 3920 Cleve- { 

land ; Galvez 174. } 

KNOLLE, WILKES H.— Tulane, 1891. Ex-President { 

Orleans Parish Medical Society; ex-President Louisiana { 

State Medical Society. Office, 212 Medical Building; 11-1; | 

Main 2512. Residence, 3920 Cleveland; Galvez 174. 

KOELLE, JOHN MARCUS— Tulane, 1901. Office, Bijou 
Pharmacy, Canal and South Franklin; 12-1; Main 1790. 
Residence, 1624 Allen; Hemlock 421. 

KOHLMANN, WILLIAM— Julius-Maximilian University, 
Wuerzburg, Germany, 1890. Professor of Gynecologj% 
Loyola; Chief Visiting Surgeon, Gynecological and Obstet- 
rical Division, Charity Hospital ; Chief in Gynecology and 
Obstetrics, Touro Infirmary; Consulting Gynecologist, New 
Orleans Dispensary for Women and Children; Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. Office, 1232 Maison 
Blanche Building; 12-2; Main 2435. Residence, 1544 State; 
Uptown 221. 

KOSTMAYER, HIRAM WATKINS— Tulane, 1909. Pro- 
fessor of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Loyola; Visiting Sur- 



i«^ 



geon, Charity Hospital. Office 2117 Tulane Avenue, op- 
posite Hotel Dieu ; 2-3 ; Galvez 932 ; Residence 5923 Freret ; 

Walnut 638. 

KRAMER, RICHARD SHAFFER— Tulane, 1919. In- 
terne, Charity Hospital ; Main 742. 

L. 

LACROIX, PAUL GEORGE— Tulane, 1913. Demonstra- 
tor in charge of Laboratory of Minor Surgery, Tulane. Of- 
fice, 1211 Maison Blanche Building; 12-1:30; Main 2719. 
Residence, 2231 General Pershing; Uptown 4725. 

Lamb, J. Hope— Tulane, 1888.* 

LAMOTHE, FRANK EUGENE— Tulane, 1908. Office, 
1226 Maison Blanche Building; 12-2; Main 2629. Resi- 
dence, 1922 Peniston; Uptown 1833. Practice limited to 
Gostro-Enterology. 

LANFRIED, CHARLES JOHN— Tulane, 1891. Fel- 
low American College of Surgeons. Office, 606 Title 
Guaranty Building, Baronne and Gravier; 2-5; Main 3615. 
Residence, 5907 Garfield; Uptown 85. Practice limited to 
Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

LANDRY, JEROME EMANUEL— Tulane, 1^08. House 
Surgeon Charity Hospital; Main 742; Assistant Professor 
in Operative Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane ; 
Second Vice-President Orleans Parish Medical Society. 

LANDRY, LUCIAN HYPOLITE— Tulane. 1907. Assist- 
ant Professor of Clinical Surgery, Tulane; Fellow American 
College of Surgeons. Office, 3523 Prjrtania, opposite Touro 
Infirmary; 3-5; Uptown 203. Residence, 1214 Nashville 
Avenue ; Uptown 701. , 

Landry, L. Beaconsfield (colored) — Meharry Medical 
College, 1908. Office, 422 Newton. 

Landry, Oliver Williard (Colored) — Meharry Medical 
College, 1911.* 

LANFORD, JOHN ALEXANDER— University of Ala- 
bama, 1905. Assistant Professor of Surgical Pathology, 
Tulane; Chief Pathological Laboratories, Touro Infirmary. 
Office, Touro Infirmary; 8-5; Uptown 4871. Residence, 
3611 Prytania; Uptown 4634. Practice limited to Labora- 
tory Diagnosis. 



50 



-«»^»«^Y 



j LAROSE, JAMES BROWNE— Tulane, 1911. Instructor 

I in Ophthalmology, Loyola. Office, 621 Macheca Building; 

j 1-4:30; Main 4596. Residence, 2419 Marengo; Uptown j 

j 4909. Practice limited to Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose | 

j and Throat. Consultant in Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, U. } 

j S. Marine Hospital. j 

I LARUE, FELIX ALPHONSE— Tulane, 1889. Professor | 

i* of Clinical and Operative Surgery, Graduate School of Medi- | 

cine, Tulane. Office, 1230 Maison Blanche Building; 12-1, | 

I 4-5; Main 2884. Residence, 1631 Constantinople; Uptown 

! 211. 

I LEAKE, JOHN PHILLIPS — Tulane, 1901. Fellow 

} American College of Surgeons. Office, Suite 1101-1105 

Maison Blanche Building ; 2-5 ; Main 4454. Residence, 3501 
j Carondelet; Uptown 3927. Practice limited to Diseases of I 

j the Ear, Nose and Throat. j 

j LEAKE, WILLIAM WALTER— B. S., M. Ph., Tulane, } 

j 1909. Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Loyola, { 

i Chief of Gynecological Division, Charity Hospital, Illinois j 

i Central Hospital; Main 2477. Residence, 1200 Louisiana } 

j Avenue; Uptown 382. 

j LeBlanc, Pierre Hoa— Tulane, 1894.* 

I LECKERT, EDMUND LAWRENCE— Tulane, 1905. Clin- 

♦ ical Assistant in Surgery, Tulane; Lecturer and Assistant 

j in Clinical Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. 

j Office, 311 Macheca Building; 3:30-5; Main 3953. Resi- 

] dence, 1225 Magazine; Jackson 334. Surgery and General 

Practice. 

LEDBETTER, BENJAMIN ALFRED— Tulane, 1892. 
Professor of Clinical Medicine, Loyola; Chief of Medical 
Division, Charity Hospital ; Member Louisiana State Board 
of Health. Office, 710 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 5410. 
Residence, 5900 Prytania; Uptown 75. 

LEDOUX, ALEXANDER— Tulane, 1891. Office, Bijou 
Pharmacy, Canal and South Franklin; Main 1790. Resi- 
dence 2007 Esplanade Avenue ; Hemlock 66. 

LEDOUX, LUCIEN AMARON— Tulane, 1917. Office, 
1222 Maison Blanche; 1-2; Main 1035. Residence, 1241 
Harmony, corner Chestnut; Uptown 4375-L. Visiting 



51 



Surgeon, Division of Gynecology and Obstetics, Charity 
Hospital. On Staff of Lying-in-Hospital. Instructor in 
! Gynecology and Obstetics, Loyola. General Practice. 

' LEIDENHEIMER, HENRY— Tulane. 1909. House Sur- 
geon, Charity Hospital. Residence, 1936 Dante; Walnut 
2118. Office, 105 Chartres (over Levy's Drug Store) ; 12-1. 
Surgery. 

LEMANN, ISAAC IVAN— Tulane, 1900. Professor of 
Clinical Medicine. Tulane ; Member Board of Directors, 
Orleans Parish Medical Society. Office, 3521 Prytania, 
opposite Touro Infirmary; 1-30-3:30; Uptown 4683. Prac- 
tice limited to Internal Medicine. Residence, 6110 St. 
Charles Avenue; Uptown 154. 

LeMonnier, Yves Rene — Tulane, 1868. Not in practice. 

Lennox, George B. (colored) — Flint, 1919. Reisdence, 
'2237 Dryades. 

LERCH, OTTO— Tulane, 1894. Office, 1231 Maison 
Blanche. Hours: Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, 
9-12; Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 3-6. Residence, 
1628 Upperline, corner Carondelet; Uptown 3737. Office 
Phone, Main 1464. 

Lescale, Joseph Fernand — Tulane, 1895. Office, 303 
Macheca Building; 11-4; Main 4060. Residence, 3514 
Canal ; Galvez 212. Practice limited to Genito-Urinary and 
Rectal Surgery. 

Letten, Alden Hirn— Tulane, 1909. Residence, 5326 
Magazine ; Uptown 639. 

LEVIN, ABRAHAM LOUIS— Tulane, 1907. Professor 
of Gastro-Intestinal Diseases, Loyola; Visiting Physician, 
Charity Hospital; Junior in Gastro-Intestinal Diseases, 
Touro. Office, 1222 Maison Blanche; 2-5; Main 1035. 
Residence, 727 Pine; Walnut 640. Practice limited to In- 
ternal Medicine; particular attention to Gastro-Enterology. 

LEVY, JOSEPH— Tulane, 1902. Clinical Assistant in 
Orthopedics and Surgical Diseases of Children, Graduate 
School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 401 Medical Building; 
1-2; Main 3220. Residence, 2006 General Taylor; Uptown 
760. ! . i 



♦ 

LEVY, LEWIS H.— Office 1226 Maison Blanche; 4:30- | 

5:30; Main 2629. Residence, 924 Moss; Hemlock 1123. 
General practice. 

LEVY, LOUIS— Tulane, 1909. Clinical Assistant in 
Gynecology, Loyola. Office, 717 Maison Blanche; 2-5; 
Main 2829. Residence, 2628 Canal; Galvez 107. Practice 
limited to General Surgery. 

LEVY, WALTER EDMUND— Tulane, 1917. Office, 
1232 Maison Blanche; 4-5; Main 2435. Residence, 7320 St. 
Charles avenue ; Walnut 61. 

LEV/IS, ERNEST SIDNEY— Tulane, 1861; B. Sc. 
Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Tulane. 
Fellow American College of Surgeons. Office, 203 Med- 
ical Building; 1-4:30; Main 960. Residence, 1625 Louisi- 
ana Avenue; Uptown 4165. 

Lewis, John A. — Tulane, 1914. Office, Cusachs Build- j 

ing, 11-12. Main 6071. Residence, 8111 Sycamore; Walnut j 

2750. j 

LEWIS, JAMES LEON—Tulane, 1898. Professor of | 

Physical Diagnosis, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. | 

Office, 421 Medical Building; 3-5; Main 1591. Residence, j 

3501 Carondelet; Uptown 1267. Internal Medicine. j 

Lindahl, Frank E.* | 

LINDNER, HENRY JOHN— Tulane, 1910. Instructor 
in Genito-Urinary and Venereal Diseases, Tulane. Office, 
519 Macheca Building; 11-12; 4:30-5:30; Main 808. Resi- 
dence, 5653 Woodlawn Place ; Galvez 84. Practice limited to 
Genito-Urinary and Venereal Diseases. 

LINDNER, JOHN W.— Tulane, 1903. Clinical Assistant 
in Surgery, Loyola. Office, 519 Mecheca Building; 1-3; 
Main 803. Residence, 915 Bourbon ; Hemlock 80. 

Lines, David Arthur — Tulane, 1891. Office and Resi- 
dence, 1940 North Rampart; Hemlock 1658. 

Lobenhoffer, John Philip— Lincoln Memorial University, 
Medical Department, Knoxville, Tenn., 1894. 

LOCASCIO, JAMES LOUIS— Tulane, 1916. Office, 720 
Maison Blanche ; 1-3 ; Main 5958. Residence, 1226 Elysian 
Fields Avenue; Hemlock 176. Practice limited to Internal 
Medicine. 



63 



LOCHTE, HENRY CLARENCE— Tulane, 1914. Assist- 
ant Instructor in Laboratory and Clinical Medicine, Tulane. 
Office, 43 Cusachs Bldg; Main 6071. Residence, 706 South 
Carrollton Avenue. 

LOTTBER, MAUD— A. B. ; M. A., Cornell. Cornell Uni- 
versity Medical College, New York, 1910. Instructor in 
Pediatrics, Tulane; Adjunct Professor of Medicine, Loyola; 
Medical Lecturer, Louisiana State Board of Health; New 
Orleans ; Visiting Physician, Charity Hospital. Office and 
residence, 1424 Milan; Uptown 2789. 

LOGAN, GEORGE KING— B. S. C, Tulane, 1894; M. D., 
Tulane, 1899. Clinical Assistant in Orthopedics and Sur- 
gical Diseases of Children, Tulane. Office, 1206 Maison 
Blanche Building; 11:30-1; Main 2324. Residence, 1539 
Philip; Jackson 363. 

LOMBARD, MARION SUNSARI— Creighton Medical 
College, 1910. Passed Assistant Surgeon U. S. P. H. Serv- 
ice. Office 535 St. Charles; Main 1511. Residence, 1738 
South Carrollton Avenue; Walnut 1619-L. Public Health 
Administration and Laboratory. 

Lopez, Charles Joseph— Tulane, 1873. Office, 420 God- 
chaux Building; 10-11; 2-3; Main 2303. Residence, 3711 
Carondelet ; Uptown 2920. Practice limited to Homeopathic 
Therapeutics. 

LOPEZ, LOUIS VYASA JAMES— Tulane, 1915. Clini- 
cal Assistant in Psychiatry, Tulane. Office, 420 Godchaux 
Building; 11-12; 3-5; Main 2303. Residence, 3711 Caronde- 
let; Uptown 2920. Practice limited to Neuro-Psychiatry 
and Internal Medicine. 

LOVE, WILLIAM ALVIN— Tulane, 1911. Instructor in 
Clinical Medicine and Medical Office, Tulane. Office, 26 
Cusachs Building; 1-3; Main 3249. Residence, 1435 Val- 
ence ; Uptown 297. 

LOWE, JAMES OSBORNE— Tulane, 1919. Interne. 
Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

Lowe, Edmund Peyton — Tulane, 1885.* 

Lowe, Vincent F.— Tulane, 1885.* 

Lucas, George W.— (Colored) Flint, 1907. Office, 624 



54 



{ 

South Rampart; 9-10; 3-5; Main 1263. Residence, 3315 \ 

Magnolia ; Uptown 2445. ♦ 

Lurie, William Abraham — Rush Medical College, 1903. | 

Office, 1129 Maison Blanche; 9-4; Main 2383. Residence, ♦ 

1503 Peters Avenue; Uptown 2003. Practice limited to | 

Stomatology, Diseases of the Mouth and Jaws and Roent- { 

genography. | 

LYNCH, ROBERT CLYDE— Tulane, 1903. Professor of { 

Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat, Graduate School of ! 

Medicine, Tulane ; Surgeon-in-charge, Ear, Nose and Throat \ 

Department, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital; Fellow { 

American College of Surgeons. Office, 634 Maison Blanche | 

Building; 1-4; Main 4575. Residence, 1202 Broadway; | 

Walnut 175. Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose { 

and Throat. » 

LYNCPI, WILLIAM MERCER— Tulane, 1896. Office, | 

634 Maison Blanche; 1-4; Main 4575. Ear, Nose and { 

Throat. ♦ 



LYONS, MARCY JOSEPH— Tulane, 1914. Clinical As- { 

sistant in Surgery, Tulane. Office, 1219 Maison Blanche; j 

12-1; Main 3731. Residence, 1618 Milan; Uptown 1433-W. { 

Surgery and General Practice. j 

LYONS, RANDOLPH— Tulane, 1907. Assistant Profes- j 

sor of Clinical Medicine, Tulane; Assistant Professor Prac- j 

tice of Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. t 

Office, 3521 Prytania Street, opposite Touro Infirmary; i 

2-4; Uptown 4683. Practice limited to Internal Medicine. I 

LYONS, SHIRLET CARLTON— Tulane, 1919. Intern | 

Charity Hospital ; Main 742. { 

M. : ' I 

MACDIARMID, GEORGE ALEXANDER— Victoria | 

University, Toronto, Canada, 1886. Residence, 1422 Jack- | 

son Avenue ; Jackson 1480. | 

MAES, URBAN— Tulane, 1900. Professor of Clinical | 

Surgery, Tulane; Fellow American College of Surgeons. > 

Office, Suite 801-805 Maison Blanche Annex; 2-3; Main j 

3456. Residence, 1671' Octavia; Uptown 207. } 

^ MA CRUDER, L. W.— University of the South, 1899. | 

Residence, 12 Marlborough Gate; Uptown 3934. Office, { 

1201 Maison Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 2321. X-Ray j 
Diagnosis 



'^^^^ » » » ^ _ 



55 



MAGRUDER, MARCUS J.— Tulane, 1889. Office, Suite 
1103-1105 Maison Blanche; 3-4:30; Main 4454. Residence, 
6027 Benjamin; Uptown 1234. 

MAKER, ALDEA— B. A.; M. A.; Tulane. 1919. Resi- 

|i dence 230 Bermuda. 

MAHLER, EVERHARD WILLIAM— Tulane, 1905. 
Professor of Internal Medicine, Loyola ; Visiting Physician, 
Tuberculosis Hospital; Chief of Medical Division, Charity 
Hospital; Secretary-Treasurer of Louisiana State Board of 
Medical Examiners, 141 Elk Place; Main 1514. Office, 
1210 Maison Blanche; 3-5; Main 135. Residence, 4730 Pry- 
tania; Uptown 1646. 

Mailhes, Roger John— Tulane, 1916. Office, 308 Medi- 
cal Building; 11-30-12:30; Main 4888. 

Mainegra, Sr., Robert J. — New Orleans School of Medi- 
cine, 1869. Office and residence, 800 Washington Avenue; 
Uptown 3294. 

MAINEGRA, JR., ROBERT J.— Tulane, 19$6. Assistant 
in Surgery, Loyola. Office, 1109 Maison Blanche; 12-2; 
Main 4477. Residence, 2324 Napoleon Avenue; Uptown 
112. General Medicine and Surgery. 

Maloney, Louis J.— Tulane, 1899.* 

Malter, Jacob M.— Tulane, 1882. Residence, 2001 Per- 
dido; Galvez 953. 

MANHOFF, BENJAMIN— Tulane, 1919. Intern 
Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

MARCHAND, JOHN L.— University of Pennsylvania, 
Medical School, 1894. Secretary-Treasurer, Diagnostic 
Clinic. Office, Diagnostic Clinic Building, 2601 Prytania; 
Uptown 4564. 

MARTIN, EDMUND DENEGRE— Tulane 1891. Pro- 
fessor of General and Abdominal Surgery, Graduate School 
of Medicine, Tulane; consulting Surgean, Eye, Ear, Nose 
and Throat Hospital ; Fellow American College of Surgeons. 
Office, 3513 Prytania; 1-3:30; Uptown 416. Residence, 
1428 Josephine; Jackson 133. 

MARTIN, JOSEPH DENEGRE— Tulane, 1903. Clini- 
cal Assistant in Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat, 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; Clinical Assistant, 



56 



...^^ 



♦ 

Ear, Nose and Throat Department, Eye, Ear, Nose and j 

Throat Hospital; Tulane, 1903. Office, Diagnostic Clinic, j 

3601 Prytania, corner Foucher; 1:30-4; Uptown 4564. j 

Residence, 1631 Audubon street; Walnut 2302. Practice } 

limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. j 

Martin, Thomas William— Tulane, 1916.* j 

Martinet, Louis A.— (Colored) Flint, 1892.* 

Mary, Amedee — Tennessee Memphis Hospital Medical 
College, 1910. Office, 155 Baronne; Main 4548. 

MATAS, RUDOLPH— Tulane, 1880. Professor of Gen- 
eral and Clinical Surgery, Tulane ; Consulting Surgeon, Eye, 
Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital; Fellow and Vice-Presi- 
dent American College of Surgeons. Office, 3523 Prytania, 
opposite Touro Infirmary; 3-5; Uptown 203. Residence, 
2255 St. Charles Avenue; Jackson 137. Practice limited 
to General Surgery. 

MATTES, ABRAHAM— Tulane, 1915. Instructor in the 
Laboratory of Clinical Medicine, Tulane ! Clinical Assistant 
in Surgery of the Genito-Urinary Organs and Rectum, 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, Liggett 
Building, St. Charles and Common streets; 4-6; Main 2323. 
Residence, 1712 Baronne; Jackson 1410. Practice limited 
to Genito-Urinary Surgery, Laboratory and Special Diag- 
nosis. 

Mattingly, Arthur Robert — Tulane, 1887. Retired. 

MAXWELL, THOMAS ANDREW — Tulane, 1913. 
Clinical Assistant in Surgery, Loyola; Member of Board 
of Directors, Orleans Parish Medical Society. Office, 1115 
Maison Blanche; 12-1:30; Main 3367. Residence, 7602 
Hampson; Walnut 196. General practice. 

May, Clarence Prentice — Tulane, 1908. Clinical Assist- 
ant in Surgery, Tulane., Office, 38 Cusachs Building ; Main 
4395. 

Mayer, Charles Raphael — (Homeopath) Hahnemann 
Medical College and Hospital, Chicago, 1885. Office and 
Residence, 919 St. Charles; 9-10; 3-4; Main 3433. General 
Practice. 

Mayer, George Alfred — Tulane, 1917.* 

MAYO, SARA TEW— Woman's Medical College of Penn- 



■^.4 



57 



sylvania, 1898. Instructor in Gynecology, Loyola. Office, 
518 Macheca Building; 3-5:30; Main 2848. Residence; 

} 5525 South Franklin; Uptown 1110. Practice limited to 

} Diseases of Women and Children. 

I MENAGE, HENRY EDWARD— Tulane, 1.892. Clinical 

} Professor of Diseases of the Skin, Tulane and Graduate 

j , School of Medicine, Tulane; Visiting Dermatologist, Eye, 

1 Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Office, Suite 301-303 

J Medical Building; 1-4; Main 4889. Residence, 4620 St. 

} Charles Avenue; Uptown 348. Practice limited to Derma- 

I tology. 

j Menendez, Anthony Manuel — Tulane, 1917. In service. 

I MENENDEZ, JOSEPH CHARLES— Tulane, 1917. 

♦ Office, 1226 Maison Blanche ; 12-1 ; Main 2629. Residence, 

} 1920 St. Roch Avenue; Hemlock 360. Surgical Instructor, 

} Loyola; Visiting Surgeon Charity Hospital. Surgery. 



{ Menville, Leon J. — Clinical Assistant in Medicine, 

} Tulane; Member Louisiana State Medical Society; Presi- 

} dent Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners, 141 Elk 

I Place; Main 1514. Office, 1201 Maison Blanche; 9-5; 

I Main 2321. Residence, Houma, La. X-Ray Diagnosis. 

{ Meraux, Louis Anthony — Tulane, 1904. Residence, 122 

{ Angela ; Hemlock 83. 

I Mercier, Charles S.— Tulane, 1878. Residence, 933 

I South Carrollton Avenue, Walnut 1114. 

j Merendino, Domenico — University of Palermo, Italy, 

j 1900. Residence, 1129 Bourbon; Hemlock 1805. 

♦ Metz, Abraham Louis — Tulane, 1893. Emeritus Pro- 
j fessor of Chemistry and Medical Jurisprudence, Tulane; 

♦ Chemist, Health Department, City of New Orleans ; Instruc- 
tor in Medicine and Demonstrator in Pathology and Bacte- 
riology, Tulane. Residence, 9 Rosa Park ; Uptown 532. 



f 
♦ 
♦ 

} METZ, WALDEMAR R.— Tulane, 1913. Residence, 9 

j Rosa Park; Uptown 532. Office, 1211 Maison Blanche 



Building; Main 2719. 



♦ Meyer, Monte Fiore — Tulane, 1914.* 

} MICHINARD, PAUL— Tulane, 1883. Professor of Ob- 

{ stetrics and Gynecology, Graduate School of Medicine, Tu- 



5R 



♦ 

lane. Office, 726 Maison Blanche Annex; 2-4; Main 4109. j 

Residence, 2104 General Pershing; Uptown 1140. j 

MILHOLLAND, WILLIAM GEORGE— Tulane, 1916. } 

Office, 1201 Maison Blanche ; 9-5 ; Main 2321. j 

Milholland, William Henry — Eclectic Medical College, | 

Ohio, 1889.* I 

MILLER, CHARLES JEFFERSON— University of Ten- j 

nessee. College of Medicine, Memphis, 1893. Professor of { 

Obstetrics and Clinical Gynecology, Tulane; Professor of { 

Abdominal Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; j 

Fellow American College of Surgeons; Vice-President 1 

Southern Surgical Asosci-ation. Office, 405 Medical Build- J 

ing; 1-3 and by appointment; Main 3590. Residence, 1638 | 

Joseph; Uptown 99. | 

Miller, Charles Robert— Tulane, 1915.* 

MILLER, HILLIARD EVE— Assistant Instructor in Ob- 
stetrics, Tulane. Office, 415 Medical Building; 1-3; Main 
4412. Residence, 1 Audubon Place; Walnut 421. Practice 
limited to Gynecology and Obstetrics. 

MIMS, CAROLINE— Woman's Medical College of Penn- 
sylvania, 1912. Clinical Assistant in Surgery of the Genito- 
urinary Organs and Rectum, Graduate School of Medi- 
cine,. Tulane. Office, 203 Medical Building; 1-5: Satur- 
days, 9-11 A. M.; Main 3785. Residence, 517 Lowerline; 
Walnut 254. 

Mims, Thomas H. (colored)— Flint, 1906.* 

Mioton, Eugene Joseph — Tulane, 1877.* 

MIOTON, SIDNEY FITZHUGH— Tulane, 1898. Office, 
216 Medical Building; Consulations by appointment; Main 
6292. Residence phone. Hemlock 1288-L. Practice limited 
to Ophthalmology. 

MITCHELL, CARLETON— Tulane, 1898. Office, 209 
Macheca Building; 9-4; Main 2392. Practice limited to 
Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 

MIXON, PORTER— Tulane, 1918; B. Sci.; Lieutenant, 
Medical Corps, U. S. Navy. Office and residence, 1902 
Canal; Main 6016-W. 

Mogabgab, A. — Tulane, 1919. Residence, 242 South 
Genois. 



I Monette, George Newman — Tulane, 1871. Office and 

j residence, 4322 Saratoga. General practice. 

j Montz, Anthony Joseph — Tulane, 1900. Residence, 3014 

j Ursuline ; Hemlock 626. 

j Moore, John Wesley (colored) — Detroit College of Medi- 

j cine and Surgery, 1917.* 

t MOORE, PIERRE ALBERT— Jefferson Medical College, 

j Philadelphia, 1895. Office, 105 Chartres, corner Canal. 

I Residence, 1424 Philip; Jackson 397. 

I MOSS, EDMUND— Tulane, 1898. Assistant Professor 

I of Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office, 415 Medical Build- 

I ing; 12:302; Main 4122. Residence, Octavia Apartments; 

j Uptown 918. 

MOULEDOUS, ANDREW DOMINIC— Ph. G.; M. D., 

I Tulane, 1908. Clinical Assistant in Surgery, Tulane; Pro- 

j fessor of Physiology, College of Pharmacy, Loyola. Office 

j 1219 Maison Blanche Building; 2-3; Main 3231. Resi- 

j dence, 3031 Jena; Uptown 1700. General practice. 

i MULLER, JOSEPH SAUTER^Tulane, 1905. Office, 

j 315 Medical Building; 11-5; Main 3190. Residence, 1402 

j South Carrollton Avenue; Walnut 954. 

} Mullen, Isaiah Eugene (colored) — Meharry, 1883. Resi- 

j dence, 935 Valence; Uptown 1144. 

i MURPHY, DANIEL JOSEPH— Tulane, 1915. Resident 

! Physician, Hotel Dieu; Galvez 1300. Residence, 2517 Ba- 

j ronne. Office, 702 Macheca Bldg.; Main 3454. 

j MURPHY, PETER FRANCIS— Tulane, 1910. Clinical 

j Assistant in Medicine, Tulane; Clinical Assistant in Inter- 

j nal Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; Assist- 

! ant General Manager Medical Department and Port Med- 

j ical Officer, New Orleans Division, United Fruit Company, 

I 321 St Charles; 8 A. M. to 5 P. M.; Main 4161. Residence, 

! 424 Millaudon ; Walnut 2601-J. Practice limited to United 

} Fruit Company. 



! Murphy, Rene Andrew — Tulane, 1889. Office and resi- 

i dence, 1718 Prytania; 9-10, 4-5; Jackson 881. 

j Murrell, David G. — Hospital College of Medicine, Louis- 

{ ville, Ky., 1878. 1438 Jackson Avenue; Jacks6n 1733-W. 



60 



n 



MC. 



MCCARTHY, EDWARD— Tulane, 1917. Clinical Assist- 
ant, Ear, Nose and Throat Department, Eye, Ear, Nose and | 
Throat Hospital. Residence, 1118 Carondelet; Main 5381. j 
Office, Bijou Pharmacy, Canal and South Franklin; 11-12; j 
5-6. Main 1790. Practice limited to diseases of the Eyes, | 
Ear, Nose and Throat. } 

Mccormick, ETTA pearl— Kentucky School of Med- j 

icine, Louisville, 1908. Office, 518 Macheca Building; 1-3; 
Main 2848. Residence 1823 Annunciation; Jackson 439. 

McCutchon, Percival B.— Tulane, 1879. Residence, 4020 
Prytania; Uptown 1533. 

McDIARMID— See MACDIARMID. 

McGowan, Robert Paul — Emory University School of j 

Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, 1916.* j 

McLaurin, H. L. — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hos- ♦ 

pital. • 

McGrane, Charles J.— Tulane, 1898.* | 

MCGUIRE, JOHN JETT— Tulane, 1919. Moved to | 

DeFuniak Springs, Fla. I 

McGUIRE, MARION HERBERT— Tulane, 1898. Of- } 

f ice, 62f Macheca Building ; 2 :30-4 ; Main 4596. Residence, | 

1114 Webster; Uptown 4969. General Medicine. j 

McILHENNY, PAUL AVERY— Tulane, 1900. Assistant { 

Professor of Orthopedics and Surgical Diseases of Children, 
Tulane; Fellow American College of Surgeons. Office, 
3513 Prytania, opposite Tour.o Infirmary. 

McShane, Augustus — Office, 1229 Maison Blanche Build- 
ing; Main 920. Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, 
Nose and Throat. 

N. 

NAEF, EMILE FIDEL— Tulane, 1916. Office, 501 Ma- 
checa Building; Main 582. Residence, 522 Fern. 

NELKEN, ABRAHAM— Tulane, 1899. Professor of 
Genito-Urinary and Rectal Diseases, Loyola ; Chief Visiting 
Genito-Urinary Surgeon, Charity Hospital; Visiting Urolo- 
gist, Touro Infirmary; Fellow American College of Sur- 



61 



geons. Office, 503 Medical Building; 1-5; Main 3130. Res- 
idence, 1648 Dufossat; Uptown 407. 

NELSON, HARRY EVERETT— Tulane, 1912. Clinical 
Assistant in Surgery, Tulane. Office, 1221 Maison Blanche 
Building; 1:30-3:30; Main 242. Residence, 2926 Canal; 
Galvez 56. Surgery, Obstetrics and General Practice. 

Newhauser, Mayer Aby— Tulane, 1910. Office, 1104 
Maison Blanche; 12-1; Main 2612. 

NEWMARK, GERTRUDE LOUISE WILCOX— Saginaw 
Valley Medical College, 1912. Office and residence, 8831 
Jeannette. 

NEWMAN, JACOB WARREN— Ph. D., University of 
Giessen, 1898; Tulane, 1902. Chief of Obstetrics, Touro 
Infirmary; Visiting Surgeon, Charity Hospital; Founder 
and Sole Owner Lying-in Dispensary for the Poor; Presi- 
dent Louisiana Commission for the Blind ; Fellow American 
! College of Surgeons. Office, 3523 Prytania ; 11-12 :30 ; Up- 

I town 203. Residence, 3512 St Charles Avenue; Uptown 65. 

Newman, James Turner (colored) ^Flint, 1893. Resi- 
dence, 2822 Third; Jackson 168. 

NEY, KARL WINFIELD— Louisville Hospital Medical 
College, Louisville, Ky., 1908. In service. 

Nicolle, Henry Tecle — Tulane, 1906. Instructor in Pa- 
thology, Loyola. Office, Diagnostic Clinic Building, 3601 
Prytania. 

NIX, JR., JAMES THOMAS— Tulane, 1910. Professor 
of Orthopedics, Loyola ; Visiting Orthopedic Surgeon, Char- 
ity Hospital and Hotel Dieu; Surgical Consultant, Diagnos- 
tic Unit, Loyola University. Residence, 1407 South Carroll- 
ton Avenue ; Wanut 427. 

NOHA, ADOLPH— Tulane, 1890. Clinical Assistant in 
Medicine, Loyola. Office, 1229 Maison Blanche Building; 
2-3; Main 920. Residence, 726 Mandeville; Hemlock 2107. 
General Practice. 

NOTHACKER HENRY STAFFORD— Tulane, 1917. Of- 
fice and residence, 930 Louisa ; Hemlock 149. 

NDTHACKER, WILLIAM— Tulane, 1889. Office and 
residence, 930 Louisa; Hemlock 149. 




0. 

OECHSNER, JOHN FREDERICK— Tulane, 1894, ' Pro- 
fessor of Orthopedics and Surgical Diseases of Children, 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, 621 Macheca 
Building; 3-5; Main 4596. Residence, 5330 Danneel; Up- 
town 1567. General and Orthopedic Surgery. Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. 

O'FERRALL, JOHN TOLSON— Tulane, 1908. Office, 
3439 St. Charles Avenue, corner Delachaise; 2-5: Uptown 
565. Residence, 1325 Second; Jackson 2394. Practice lim- 
ited to Orthopedic Surgery. Fellow American College of 
Surgeons. 

O'HARA, JOSEPH ALPHONSE— Tulane, 1900. Pro- 
fessor of Diseases of the Nervous System, Loyola ; Coroner 
City of New Orleans, South Franklin and Tulane ; Main 148. 
Office, 1109 Maison Blanche Building; 3-6 and by appoint- 
ment; Main 4747. Residence, 2241 Baronne; Jackson 49. 
Practice limited to Neurology and Psychiatry. 

O'KELLEY, JAMES PHARES— Tulane, 1893. Clinical 
Professor of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology, Tulane. 
Office, 616 Macheca Building; 11-1, 2-4; Main 3363. Res- 
idence, 1701 Marengo; Uptown 1577. Practice limited to 
Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. Fellow American 
College of Surgeons. 

ORIOL, RAMON ADRIAN— Tulane, 1913. Office, 1226 
Maison Blanche Building; 12-1; Main 2629. Residence, 
1808 Ursuline; Hemlock 530. 

Otis, Suzanna.* 

OTIS, WALTER JOSEPH— Medical College of Virginia, 
1915. Professor of Psychiatry,- Loyola; Visiting Neuro 
Psychiatrist, Charity Hospital; Neurologist and Psychia- 
trist, Diagnostic Clinic; Consulting Neuro-Psychiatrist, 
New Orleans Dispensary for Women and Children. Office, 
Diagnostic Clinic Building, 3601 Prytania, opposite Touro 
Infirmary; hours, 2 to 5, and by appointment (Sundays ex- 
cepted) ; Uptown 4564. Residence, 936 Webster; Uptown 
230. Practice limited to Neuro-Psychiatry. 

OTTO, HENRY JOHN^Tulane, 1900. Clinical Assistant 
in Genito-Urinary and Rectal Diseases, Graduate School of 



63 



Medicine, Tulane. Office 243 South Rampart, corner Gra- 
vier (Otto's Drug Store) ; 4-6; Main 9877. General Prac- 
tice. 

OVERBAY, FRANK ANDERSON— Tulane, 1914. Chief 
of Department of the Eye, Presbyterian Hospital. Office, 
306 Macheca Building; 1-5; Main 1078. Residence, 8423 
Pritchard Place ; Walnut 343. Practice limited to Diseases 
of the Eye. 



PAGE, JOSEPH HERBERT— Tulane, 1908. 734 Maison 
Blanche Annex; 3-5; Main 359. Residence, 1456 Camp 
Street, ; Jackson 631. Internal Medicine. 

PALMISANO, DOMINICK ANDREW— Tulane, 1913. 
Clinical Assistant in Medicine, Tulane. Office, Bijou Phar- 
macy, Canal and South Franklin; Main 1790. Residence, 
1438 Pine; Walnut 489. 

Parham, Duncan — Tulane, 1918. Mayo Clinic, Roches- 
ter, Minn. 

PARHAM, FREDERICK WILLIAM— Tulane, 1879. 
Professor of General and Abdominal Surgery, Graduate 
School of Medicine, Tulane; Consulting Surgeon, Eye, Ear, 
Nose and Throat Hospital; member Board of Governors, 
American College of Surgeons; member Directing Board, 
Radium Institute of New Orleans. Office, 3513 Prytania; 
1-3:30; Uptown 416. Residence, 1429 Seventh; Uptown 
1822. General Surgery. 

Parker, James L. — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hos- 
pital; Main 742. 

PATTON, GEORGE FARRAR— University of Bonn, 
Germany, 1876. Professor of the Practice of Medicine, 
Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; Registrar, Charity 
Hospital. Residence, 1134 Camp; Jackson 510. Consulta- 
tions. 

PATTON, WILLIAM THOMAS— Tulane, 1908. Profes- 
sor of Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat, Loyola ; Chief 
of Division of Rhinology and Laryngology, Charity Hos- 
pital ; Visiting Oto-Laryngologist, Touro Infirmary ; Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. Office, 410 Medical Build- 
ing; 1-3-30, and by appointment; Main 29. Residence, 2007 



64 



Palmer Avenue; Walnut 2180. Practice limited to Ear, 
Nose and Throat. 

Perez, Jose Antonio — Tulane, 1907.* 

Perine, J. C— * 

PERKINS, PUFFIN TROUSDALE— Tulane, 1906. 
Clinical Assistant in Surgery, Tulane. Office, 8320 Oak 
Street; Walnut 682. Residence, 1135 Fern Street; Walnut 
422. General Surgery. 

PERKINS, WILLIAM MARTIN— Tulane, 1897. In- 
structor in Clinical Surgery, Tulane; Professor of Clinical 
Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane; Fellow- 
American College of Surgeons. Office, 621 Macheca Build- 
ing; 1-2:30; Main 4596. Residence, 2123 Coliseum; Jack- 
son 66. General Surgery. 

PERRET, JOSEPH MAXIME— Tulane, 1914. Office, 
1407 South Carrollton Avenue; 1-3; Walnut 165. Resi- 
dence, 1205 Elysian Fields Street; Hemlock 29. 

Perrilliat, Louis C. — Tulane, 1899. Not in practice. 

PETERMAN, EDWARD STANLEY— Tulane, 1919. 
Interne, Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

Peterson, Frederick Carl — Tulane, 1894. ■•* 

PETTIT, WILLIAM FOSTER— Tulane, 1898. Resi- 
dence, 1758 Jackson Avenue ; Jackson 454. 

PHILLIPS, WILLIAM DAVID— Tulane, 1890. B. S. 
Phar. Instructor in Clinical Obstetrics, Tulane. Professor 
of Operative Gynecology on the Cadaver, Graduate School 
of Medicine, Tulane ; Fellow American College of Surgeons. 
Office, 1201 Maison Blanche Building; 1-3, and by appoint- 
ment; Main 2321. Residence, 479 Audubon Street; Walnut 
2142. Surgery and Obstetrics. 

Pitkin, Albert P. — Tulane 1918. Clinical Assistant to 
Surgery, Tulane. Intern Touro Infirmary; Uptown 2684. 
Residence, 632 Esplanade Avenue; Hemlock 2975. 

Piatt, R. J. — Instructor in Anesthesia, Tulane. With 
American forces overseas, at present stationed at Mayence, 
Germany, with Field Hospital No. 6. 

Points, John Frank; — Tulane, 1903. Adjunct Professor 
of Surgery, Loyola; Instructor in Surgery, School of Den- 
tistry, Loyola; Visiting Surgeon, Charity Hospital. Office, 



65 



♦ 

714 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 3102. Residence, 520 
South Solomon; Galvez 490. 

POLLOCK, JAMES ERNEST— Tulane, 1906. Office 
and Residence, 627 Olivier. 

Poree, Lambert E. — (Colored) Harvey Medical College, 
Chicago, 1898.'^ 

POSMAINSKY, ISAAC P.— Tulane, 1904,* 

Pothier, Olivier Louis — Tulane, 1889. Professor of 
Pathology and Bacteriology, Loyola; Professor of General 
Histology, Pathology and Bacteriology, Loyola School of 
Dentistry ; Pathologist, French Hospital. Office, Suite 214- 
215 Medical Building; 3-5; Main 5703, and by appointment; 
Main 5703. Residence, 1916 Amelia; Uptown 2263-W. Bac- 
terology. Pathology and Laboratory Diagnosis. 

Potts, Robert Hollingsworth — Tulane, 1918. Instructor 
in Pathology, Tulane. 

Powe, A. M. — Interne, Charity Hospital ; Main 742. 

Pratt, Jr., George King— Tulane, 1906. B. S. Office, 
1203 Maison Blanche; 3-5; Main 199. Residence, 1806 
Milan Street ; Uptown, 3462. Internal Medicine. 

Pratt, Sr., George King. — Tulane, 1874. Not in practice. 

PRATT, JOHN GALLBRAITH— Tulane, 1916. Clinical 
Assistant in Genito-Urinary and Venereal Diseases, Tulane. 
Office, 724 Baronne ; Main 4049. Residence, 1232 State. 

PRAY, ALFRED ARNOLD— Tulane, 1907. Office, 705 
j Macheca Building ; 2-4 ; Main 3101. 

♦ Preis, Edward Burke — Tulane, 1898. Not in practice. 

I PROVOSTY, LUCIEN MAURICE— Tulane, 1892. Clini- 

I cal Assistant in Surgery, Loyola. Office, 713 Macheca 

! Building; 2:30-5; Main 1564. Residence, 821 Broadway, 

I Walnut 123. 

♦ 

I Purser, John L. — University of Nashville, Medical De- 

I partment, 1900. Office, 1114 Maison Blanche Building; 

! 10-11; 12-4; Main 3846. Residence, 1404 Broadway Street; 

Walnut 1522. Practice limited to Genito-Urinary and Rec- 
tal Diseases. 



G6 



Q. 

QUERENS, PERCY LEONARD— Tulane, 1914., In- 
structor in Dietetics, Post-Graduate School of Medicine, Tu- 
lane; Visiting Surgeon, Charity Hospital; Visiting Physi- 
cian, New Orlean Dispensary for Women and Children. 
Office, 41 Cusachs Building; 3:30-5; Main 6071. Residence 
2016 Baronne; Jackson 735-L. Practice limited to Internal 
Medicine and Tropical Medicine., 

R. 



RABOUIN, LOUIS LUCIEN— Tulane 1892. Office, 1218 
Maison Blanche Building; 4-6. Main 1178. Residence, 2216 I 

Prytania Street ; Jackson 1400. General practice. I 

Randall, Clarence Cecil— Tulane, 1916* 

Rankin, Richard Brandon — Tulane, 1917.* 

RAPPANNIER, ERNEST A.— Tulane, 1894. Residence, 
1535 North Claiborne; Hemlock 607. 

REED, WILLIAM ARTHUR— Tulane, 1912. Office, 305 
Medical Building; 5-6; Main 3130. 

Reilley, Walter Henry— Tulane, 1902. Office, Maison 
Blanche Building. 

REISS, PAUL L.— Tulane, 1890. Academie de Mede- 
cine, Paris, 1893. Office, 523 Macheca Building; 10-12; 
2-4; Main 4729. Residence, 1514 Peters Avenue; Upto^^Tl 
1390. 

Reynaud, Brunner Burke — Dallas Medical College, 1904; 
Tulane, 1909.* 

REYNAUD, LOUIS FAVROT— New Orleans School of 
Medicine, 1866. Honorary Member Orleans Parish Medical 
Society. Not in practice. 

Reynolds, Virgil Calhoun — Louisville Medical College, 
1889. Office, 1106 Maison Blanche; 10-12; Main 628. 

Rhyne, Arthur W. — University of San Antonio, Texas, 
1905. 

RICHARD, EUCLID J.— Tulane, 1897. Clinical As- j 

sistant in Surgery, Loyola. Olfice, 209 Macheca Building; ♦ 

12 :30-2 ; Main 2392. Residence, 3507 Canal ; Galvez 481. I 

Richard, James Isidore— Tulane, 1892. Office , 420 j 



...►.-— -.4 



Macheca Building; Main 4398. Residence, 900 Peters Ave- 
nue; Uptown 164. 

Richard, Thomas Stephen — Tulane, 1919. Residence, 
j 521 Fourth. 

j Riley, Robert Lee — Tulane, 1884. Residence, 237 Ber- 

j muda ; Algiers 158. 



♦ RIVES, JAMES DAVIDSON— Suite 801-805 Maison 
I Blanche Annex; 2-3; Main 3456. 

J ROBIN, ERNEST A.— Tulane, 1891 ; B. Sci. Professor 

♦ of Diseases of the Eye, Graduate School of Medicine, Tu- 
lane ; Surgeon-in-charge of the Eye Department of the Eye, 
Ear, No5e and Throat Hospital. Office, 705 Canal-Com- 
mercial Bank Annex Building, 211 Camp ; Main 3979. Resi- 
dence, 1315 Webster; Uptown 2436. Practice limited to 
Diseases of the Eye. 

Robin, Labasse Joseph — Tulane, 1919. Office, 305 Medi- 
! cal Building ; 2-5 ; Main 4215. 



; ROBIN, WILLIAM HENRY— Tulane, 1891. Superintend- 

1 ent of Public Health, City of New Orleans. Office, City 

! Hall Annex; Main 575. Residence, 2230 Esplanade; Hem- 

I lock 1448. 

♦ 

j Rocquet, Albert P.— Tulane, 1889. Office, 308 Medical 

{ Building; 3-4; Main 4888. Residence, 1260 Esplanade; 

i Hemlock 69. 

♦ 

j Rodda, Edward Dwight — University of Arkansas, Medi- 

i cal Department, Little Rock, Arkansas.* 

I ROELING, GEORGE FREDERICK — Tulane, 1908. 

{ Office, 1128 Maison Blanche; 2:30-3:30; Main 2383. Resi- 

{ dence, 4005 St. Claude ; Hemlock 515. Neurology and Neuro- 

I Surgery. 

I ROELING, HENRY W.— Tulane, 1910. Residence, 

j 3040 Esplanade; Hemlock 1364. 

} Romaguera, Francis — University of the South, Medical 

{ Department, Sewanee, Tenn., 1908. Residence, 1425 Royal; 

j Hemlock 453. 

♦ Rosenthal, Jacob Sontheimer — Tulane, 1915.'-' 

j ' ROSENTHAL, JONAS WILLIAM— Tulane, 1917. 

j Office, 1141 Maison Blanche Building; 1-2; Main 1217. 



68 



ROSENTHAL, MAURICE SAMUEI^— Tulane, 1916. 
Office, 410 Medical Building; 3-4; Main 1861. Residence, 
2028 Carondeiet; Jackson 70. 

ROSENTHAL, SIMON JONAS— Tulane , 1911. Office, 
1115 Maison Blanche; 1:30-3; Main 3367. Residence, 2632 
Napoleon Avenue; Uptown 3516. General practice. 

ROUSSEL, JOSEPH NUMA— Professor of Dermatology, 
Loyola; Chief Visiting Dermatologist, Charity Hospital; 
Visiting Dermatologist, Touro Infirmary; Visiting Derma- 
tologist, Presbyterian Hospital. Suite 719-721 Macheca 
Building; 11-12; 1:30-3:30; Main 3709. Residence, 1540 
Peters Avenue; Uptown 806. Practice limited to Diseases 
of the Skin. 

Royals, Walter C— Tulane, 1917.*' 

RUDOLr', THEOBALD ROBERT— Tulane, 1902. 
Office, 731 Maison Blanche; 4:30-5:30; Main 5562. Resi- 
dence, 1526 Josephine; Jackson 5. General Practice. 

RYAN, JAMES JOSEPH— Tulane, 1899. Professor of 
Anatomy, School of Dentistry, Loyola. Office, 1217 Maison 
Blanche; 1-3, and by appointment; Main 2441. Residence, 
1706 Palmer Avenue ; Walnut 120. Practice limited to Dis- 
eases of the Ear, Nose and Throat, Bronchoscopy and Eso- 
phagoscopy. 



SALATICH, PETER BLAISE— Tulane, 1905. Professor 
of Clinical Gynecology, Loyola; Visiting Gynecologist, 
Charity Hospital ; Visiting Gynecologist, Hotel Dieu ; Fellow 
American College of Surgeons. ^Office, 1141 Maison 
Blanche; 2-4; Main 1217. Residence, 3202 St. Charles Ave- 
nue ; Uptown 244. General Surgery. 

SALERNO, EMMANUEL FRANCIS— Tulane, 1910. In- 
structor in Surgery, Loyola. Residence, 3031 Tulane Ave- 
nue ; Galvez 342. 

SALOMON, LUCIEN F.— Tulane, 1872. Died December 
31, 1919; Age 69. 

Sambola, Alexander B. — University of the South Medical 
Department, Sewanee, Tenn., 1904. Residence, 5012 Freret 
Street ; Uptown 3338-W. 



G'.^ 



SAMUEL, ERNEST CHARLES— Tulane, 1911. In- 
structor in Clinical Medicine and Radiology, Tulane ; Roent- 
genologist, Eye, Ear, Nose and Troat Hospital; Radios 
therapeutist. Radium Institute of New Orleans, Touro In- 
firmary; Uptown 2684. Residence, 1522 Aline; Uptown 
1880. 

SAUTER, CHARLES FREDERICK— Tulane, 1894. 
Residence, 3153 Chippewa Street. 

SCHARFF, EDWIN STANLEY— Tulane, 1906. Clinical 
Assistant in Genito-Urinary Diseases, Loyola. Office, 511 
Medical Building; Main 5729. Residence, 1410 Thalia; 
Jackson 1368-W. 

SCHEPPEGRELL, WILLIAM— Medical College of the 
State of South Carolina, Charleston, 189. Office, 848 
Maison Blanche Annex; 11-1; 3-5; Main 132. Residence, 
497 Walnut Street; Walnut 72. Practice limited to Ear, 
Nose and Throat and Hay Fever. 

Scott, Jr., Jo^seph Tilford— Tulane, 1894. Office, Liggett 
Building, corner St. Charles and Common; 10-1; 3-5. 
Residence, 1641 State; Walnut 2062. Practice limited to 
Urology and Proctology. 

Scott, Leonard Case- -Berlin University, Germany, 1880. 
Instructor in the Laboratories of Hygiene and Public 
Health, Tulane ; Chemist, Louisiana State Board of Health. 
Residence, 440 Lowerline. 

Scott, Warren Fielding — Tulane, 1^12* 

Seale, Thomas Jefferson — Tulane, 1912.* 

SEEBOLD, HERMAN B.— Tulane, 1902. Lieutenant, 
Field Hospital No. 6, Sanitary Train, Second Brigade, 
American Forces in Germany. Last address, Mayence, 
Germany. 

SEEMANN, WILLIAM HENRY— Tulane, 1900. Profes- 
sor of Hygiene, Tulane ; Bacteriologist, Health Department, 
City Board of Health of New Orleans and Louisiana State 
Board of Health; Visiting Pathologist, Charity Hospital. 
Dean School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Tulane. 
Qffice, 505.Macheca Building; 1-2; Main 3944. Residence, 
4439 De Montluzin ; Hemlock 777. 

SELLERS, THOMAS BENTON— Tulane, 1913. Instruc- 
tor in Anatomy, Tulane; Clinical Assistant in Gynecology 



and Obstetrics, Graduate School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, j 

41 Cusachs Building; Main 5857. Residence. 1808 Elm; j 

Walnut 1374. Gynecology and General Practice. j 

SEXTON, LUTHER— Tulane, 1881. Assistant Profes- | 

sor of Clinical Minor Surgery, Tulane. Office, 214 Medi- } 

cal Building ; 11-4 ; 4-5 ; Main 5703. Residence, 1623 Fourth, j 

Jackson 269. j 

SHARP, COVINGTON H.— Tulane, 1915. Clinical As- j 

sistant in Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology, Tulane; j 

Clinical Assistant in Diseases of the Eye, Graduate School j 

of Medicine, Tulane; Clinical Assistant Eye Department, } 

Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Residence, 7325 St. j 

Charles Avenue. i 

Siekman, Ivan F. — Tulane, 1892. Residence, 4007 Canal; } 

Galvez 1261. j 

SIGNORELLI, JOHN— Tulane, 1912. Adjunct Professor j 

of Pediatrics, Loyola ; Visiting Pediatrist, Charity Hospital. } 

Office, 731 Maison Blanche; 12:30-4; Main 5562. Resi- j 

dence, 3138 De Soto; Hemlock 1239. j 

SILVERMAN, DANIEL NATHAN— Tulane, 1917. Of- j 

fice, 1222 Maison Blanche; 11-12; Main 5562. Residence, i 

7912 Jeannette Place ; Walnut 1210. i 

Simms, Jacob E.— (Colored) Flint, 1909. Residence, 2417 j 

Magnolia; Jackson 969. j 

SIMON, HENRY THEODORE— Tulane, 1915. Assist- ! 

ant in Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office and residence, 1617 ♦ 

♦ 

St. Charles Avenue. ♦ 

SIMON, SIDNEY KOHN— Tulane, 1903. Assistant Pro- j 

fessor of Clinical Medicine, Tulane. Office, 3439 St. Charles j 

Avenue, corner Delachaise; 2-5;, and by appointment; Up- j 

town 565. Residence, 1533 Henry Clay Avenue; Uptown 78. j 

Practice limited to Diseases of the Digestive System. j 

SIMS, HARRY VERNON— Tulane, 1915. Office, 1203 j 

Maison Blanche Building; 5-6. Main 199. j 

Singleton, Jr., John Milton— Tulane, 1917.* j 

Smith, Benjamin Franklin — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Char- I 

ity Hospital. j 

Smith, Jr., John Holmes — University of Maryland, School j 

of Medicine, Baltimore, 1905. '^ } 



SMITH, JOHN WALTER ANTHONY— Tulane, 1910. 
Office, Liggett Building, corner St. Charles and Common; 
1-3; Main 2323. Residence, 3435 Constance; Uptown 3658. 
Surgery and General practice. 

SMITH, VICTOR CONWAY— Tulane, 1889. Assistant 

I' Professor of Ophthalmology, Tulane. Office, 1110 Maison 

Blanche; 1-5; Main 619. Residence 2311 Magazine. Prac- 
I tice limited to Diseases of the Eye. 

I SMITH, WILBUR C— University Medical College of 

Kansas City, Missouri, 1908. Moved to Americus Ga. 

SMYTH, JOHN^Tulane, 1900. Professor of Clinical 
Surgery, Tulane. Office, 724 Baronne, between Girod and 
j Julia; 3-5; Main 5565. Residence 7 Richmond Place ; Wal- 

- nut 1034. Practice limited to Surgery. 

SONIAT, JOSEPH MOORE— Tulane, 1889. Assistant 
Medical Inspector, Health Department, City of New Or- 
leans. Office, 711 Macheca Building; 10-1 ; Main 19. Res- 
idence, 1718 Bordeaux; Uptown 1739. , 
SOUCHON, EDMOND— Tulane, 1867., Honorary Mem- 
ber Orleans Parish Medical Society ; Emeritus Professor of 
Anatomy and Clinical Surgery, Tulane; Consulting Sur- 
geon, Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. Residence, 
i 2403 St. Charles Avenue; Jackson 72. 

! SOUCHON, MARION SIMS— Tulane, 1894. Assistant 

j Professor of Clinical Surgery, Tulane; Fellow American 

j College of Surgeons. Office, 1310 Whitney-Central Bank 

Building, St. Charles and Gravier; 3-4; Main 270. Resi- 
dence, 2405 St. Charles Avenue; Jackson 208. Practice lim- 
ited to Surgery. 

SPENCER, LEWIS CASS— Johns Hopkins, 1911; B. Sci. 
Instructor in Orthopedics and Surgical Diseases of Children, 
Tulane. Office, 1126 Maison Blanche Building; 11-1; 
Main 4264. 

STAFFORD, STEPHEN WALTER— Tulane, 1899. Pro- 
fessor of Surgery, Loyola; Superintendent, Charity Hos- 
pital; Main 742. 

Stell, Jack Sidney— Tulane, 1917.* 

I Stewart, George McGehee — Tulane, 1901.='= 

Stewart, R. H.* 

♦ ^^^^ 

72 • 



Stilphen, Henry Newell— Tulane, 1901.* 

Stockton, Frederick Eugene — Tulane, 1911.* 

STONE, RUSSELL E.— University of Tennessee, College 
of Medicine, 1899. Fellow American College of Surgeons. 
Office, Liggett Building, corner St. Charles and Common; 
3-5 ; Main 2323. Surgery. 

^TORCK. JACOB AMBROSE— Tulane, 1907. Professor 
of Diseases of the Digestive System, Graduate School of 
Medicine, Tulane. Office, 508 Medical Building; 2-5; Main 
3096. Residence, 1460 Nashville Avenue; Uptown 1659. 
Practice limited to Diseases of the Digestive System. 

Strange, William Robinson — Tulane, 1907.* 

STRONG, ROBERT ALEXANDER— Tulane, 1907. As- 
sistant Professor of Pediatrics, Tulane ; Visiting Pediatrist, 
Charity Hospital; Lieutenant Colonel, Medical Reserve 
Corps, U. S. Army. Office, Suite 1222 Maison Blanche 
Building; hours by appointment; Main 1035. Residence, 
5336 Danneel; Uptown 5175. Practice limited to Diseases 
of Infancy and Childhood. 

STULB, JOSEPH GEORGE— Tulane, 1900. Clinical 
Assistant in Medicine, Loyola. Residence, 1332 St. Mary; 
Jackson 2245. 

STUMPF, GEORGE A.— Texas Medical College Hospital, 
1878. Office and residence, 2003 Dryades ; Jackson 692. 

SWORDS, MERRICK WARD— Tulane, 1907. Professor 
of Genito-Urinary Diseases, Loyola; Chief of Genito-Uri- 
nary Division, Charity Hospital ; Secretary Louisiana State 
Board of Health, New Court Building, Conti and Royal; 
Main 612. Office, 1106 Maison Blanche Building; 2-4; 
Main 628. Residence, 1460 Moss; Hemlock 981. 

SZABARY, LATZI— Tulane, 1877. Residence, 3701 Dau- 
phine; Hemlock 9424. 



TALBOT, PAUL TILMAN— Tulane, 1908. Secretary- 
Treasurer, Louisiana State Medical Society, 141 Elk Place; 
Adjunct Professor of Gynecology, Loyola; Visiting G>Tie- 
cologist. Charity Hospital ; Fellow American College of Sur- 
geons. Office, 624 Maison Blanche Building; 11-12, 4-5; 
Main 873. Residence, 8316 Sycamore; Walnut 1400. 



TAQUINO, GEORGE JAMES— Tulane, 1911. Clinical 
Assistant in Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat, Grad- 
uate School of Medicine, Tulane; Assistant Surgeon, Ear 
Nose and Throat Department, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 
Hospital. Office, 634 Maison Blanche Building; Main 
4574. Residence, 302 Olympia; Galvez 288. Practice lim- 
ited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. , 

TAYLOR, ARCHIE— Tulane, 1919. Interne Charity 
Hospital ; Main 742. 

TEBAULT, JR., CHRISTOPHER HAMILTON— Tulane, 
1895. Office and residence, 1722 Baronne; Jackson 374. 

TEDESCO, IGNATIUS— Tulane, 1913. Clinical Assist, 
ant in Surgery, Loyola. Office, 412 Medical Building; 4-6; 
Main 1541. Residence, 3207 De Soto; Hemlock 2480. 

Terhune, William Barclay — Tulane, 1915.* 

THIBAUT, PIERRE LE ONCE— Tulane, 1900. A. B. 
Office, 1230 Maison Blanche Building; 1-3; Main 2484. 
Residence. 1223 North Robertson; Hemlock 815. 

THIBERGE, NARCISSE F.— Tulane, 1899. Office, 848 
Maison Blanche Annex; 1-3; Main 132. Residence, 2021 
Ursuline; Hemlock 526. 

THOMAS, ALBERT R.— Tulane, 1919. Interne Charity 
Hospital ; Main 742. 

Thomas, George Anthony — Tulane, 1907.*. , 

Thomas, John Willard — Harvard University, 1900.* 
Thomas, Joseph Henry — Howard University, School of 
Medicine, Washington, D. C, 1912.* 

Thomason, Louis Marion— Tulane, 1906. Office, 223 
Medical Building; 2-30; Main 1226. Residence, 3131 Ca- 
nal; Galvez 1231., 

Thornhill, Eugene Charles (Colored)— Flint, 1909. Of- 
fice 303-304 Pythian Temple, Gravier and South Basin; 
3-5; Main 5874. Residence, 2216 Second; Jackson 1889. 
Genito-Urinary and General Practice. 

Tibbits, Flora V. W. — Northwestern Medical College and 
Hospital, Chicago, 1906.* 

Tichenor, Sr.. George Humphrey — Years of Practice Act. 
Residence, 1917 Palmer Avenue; Walnut 2078. 



74 



♦ 
♦ 

Tichenor, Jr., George Humphrey — Tulane, 1901. Resi- } 



dence, 4007 Magnolia; Uptown 2318-W. } 

THURINGER, JOSEPH MARIA— Assistant Professor j 

of Anatomy, Tulane. Residence, 7419 Hampson; Walnut j 

911. I 

TILLY, WILTON PAUL DUNCAN— University of j 

Nashville and Tennessee, Medical Department, 1911. Clin- { 

ical Assistant in Surgery, Loyola. Office, 802 Maison } 

Blanche Annex; 12-2; Main 3448. Residence, 2625 Ursu- } 

line Avenue; Hemlock 63. Visiting Surgeon, Charity Hos- t 

pital; Visiting Physician, Belvedere Private Sanitarium. i 

Surgery and General Practice. ♦ 

Tircuit, Adolphe — Tulane, 1878. Office and residence, ♦ 

830 Burdette; Walnut 808-W. General Practice. ! 

Tircuit, Felix— Tulane, 1878.* | 

Tompkins, Jr., John Almy — University of Maryland, j 

School of Medicine, 1898.* } 

TREPAGNIER, DALTON HARRIS — Office, 1106 { 

Maison Blanche Building; 11-12; Main 628. Residence, } 

2216 Peniston; Uptown 1749-W. Internal Medicine and j 

General Practice. } 

TROESCHER, WILLIAM G.— Tulane, 1903. CHnical j 

Assistant in Surgery, Loyola. Office, 209 Macheca Build- | 

ing; 2-3:30; Main 2392. Residence, 1102 General Pershing; | 

Uptown 1400. General Practice. I 



Tucker, Irenaeus Nicholson — Tulane, 1915.* ♦ 

Tucker, Lee Hilliard— Tulane, 1918.* I 

Tudury, Ralph A.— Tulane, 1893. Residence, 1504 Ely- | 

sian Fields Avenue; Hemlock 2236-J. { 

Turney, Frederick — Tulane, 1894.* j 

TUSSON, GEORGE JOSEPH— Tulane, 1901. Office, | 

1219 Maison Blanche Building; 1-2; Main 3231. Residence, } 

1021 Bourbon ; Hemlock 7. General Practice. { 

Tyler, Louis Ira — Tulane, 1910. Clinical Assistant in } 

Pediatrics, Tulane. Residence, 3116 Prytania; Uptown { 
4684. 



u. 

UNSWORTH, CHARLES VIRGINIUS— Tulane, 1904. 
Clinical Assistant in Psychiatry, Tulane ; Professor of Neu- 
rology, Loyola; Visiting Neurologist, Charity Hospital; 
Psychiatrist, Louisiana Retreat for Mental and Nervous 
Diseases. Office, 212 Medical Building; 2-4:30; Main 
2512. Residence, 1476 Henry Clay Avenue; Uptown 1384. 
Nervous and Mental Diseases. 

UPTON, GEORGE HAMPDEN— Tulane, 1907. Office, 
711 Macheca Building; 12-1; Main 19. Residence, 1302 
Jackson Avenue ; Jackson 84. General Medicine. 

V. 

Vance, Charles Wallace (Colored)— Flint, 1894. Resi- 
dence, 1714 Iberville; Main 6032. 

VAN STUDDIFORD, MARTIN THOMAS— Tulane, 
1918. Office, 730 Maison Blanche Annex; 3:30-5; Main 
4193. Residence, Hotel Grunewald; Main 3920. 

VAN WAUT, ROY McLEAN— McGill University, Fac- 
ulty of Medicine, Montreal, Canada, 1902. Professor of 
Psychiatry, Tulane. Office, 3521 Prytania, opposite Touro 
Infirmary; consultations by appointment only; Uptown 
4683. Residence, 450 Audubon Street; Walnut 1217. Prac- 
tice limited to Nervous and Mental Diseases. 

Veazie, Henry Augustus— Tulane, 1876. Office, 320 Ma- 
checa Building; 10-12 A. M., 7-8 P. M. ; Main 2415. Resi- 
dence, 1105 Prytania; Main 4120. 

VERDIER, CHARLES EDWIN— Hahnemann Medical 
College and Hospital, Philadelphia, 1904. Suite 707-709 
Maison Blanche Annex; 10-4; Main 752. Residence, 2819 
Carondelet. Practice limited to Urology. 

Vining, R. J. (Colored)— Flint, 1907. Office, Pythian 
Temple, Gravier and South Franklin; Main 5874. ' Resi- 
dence, 2027 Seventh; Uptown 4124. 

VOSS, CHARLES HENRY— Tulane, 1918. Assistant in 
Anatomy, Tulane. Office, 41 Cusachs Building ; 1-3 ; Main 
5857. 

VOSS, REYNOLD CHRISTIAN— Tulane, 1916. Clin- 
ical Assistant in Pediatrics, Tulane. Office, 1105 Maison 



76 



Blanche Building; 12-1 and by appointment; Main 4454. 
Residence, 321 Hillary; Walnut 22.. Pediatrics and Gen- 
eral Practice. 

W. 

WAIDE, DAVID FREDERICK— Louisville Hospital, 
Medical College, 1908. Office, Suite 311-313 Macheca 
Building ; 2-5 ; Main 3953. Residence, 7506 Hampson ; Wal- 
nut 1206. Practice limited to Diseases of the Eye, Ear, 
Nose and Throat. 

Wailes, Leonard A. — Jefferson Medical College, 1861.* 
Wailes, Prince Oliver (Colored) — Meharry Medical Col- 
lege, 1909.* J 

WALET, EUGENE HENRY— Tulane, 1896. Professor | 

of Gynecology, Loyola ; Visiting Surgeon, Gynecological and j 

Obstetrical Division, Charity Hospital; Visiting Gynecolo- { 

gist. Hotel Dieu. Office, 621 Macheca Building; 12-2; ! 

Main 4596. Residence, 1206 Peters Avenue; Uptown 1579. I 

Gynecology and General Practice. ! 

WALLACE, ROBERT BOYD— Tulane, 1919. Interne, | 

Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

Wert, Arthur W.— Tulane, 1919. Residence, 1528 
Thalia. 

Walker, R. B. — Interne, Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

WALLBILLICH, CHARLES A.— Tulane, 1905. Assist- 
ant Professor in Gynecology and Obstetrics, Graduate 
School of Medicine, Tulane. Office, Suite 311-313 Ma- 
checa Building; 1-3; Main 2953. Residence, 1429 North 
Broad Avenue; Hemlock 1430., 

WALSHE, THOMAS JOHN— Tulane, 1897. Clinical As- 
sistant in Gynecology, Loyola. Office, 516 Macheca Build- 
ing; 2-4; Main 430. Residence, 3534 Tulane; Galvez 154. 

WALTHER, HENRY WELLMANN EMILE— Tulane, 
1910. Professor of Urology, Loyola; Chief Genito-Urinary 
Surgeon, Charity Hospital; Junior Associate in Urology, 
Touro Infirmary. Office, 509 Macheca Building; 1-5; 
Main 163. Residence, 1922 Marengo; Uptov^n 1572. 
Practice limited to Urology. 

WATSON, DAVID LIPSCOMB — University of Ala- 
bama, School of Medicine, Mobile, 1891., Adjunct Profes- 



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GEO. AUGUSTIN, Prop. } 

2 1 6 Maison Blanche Bldg. New Orleans, La. | 

Phones: Main 5214; Uptown 1067 Hours: 1 to 5 I 



sor of Obstetrics, Loyola. Office and residence, Second and 
Camp ; 8-9, 3-5 ; Jackson 213. General practice. 

WEAVER, WILLIAM HENRY— Indiana Eclectic Medi- 
cal College, Indianapolis, 1883. Office and residence, 715 
Pelican Avenue, Algiers; Algiers 141. 

WEBER, ARTHUR— Tulane, 1890. Office, 1226 Maison 
Blanche; 12-1; Main 2629. Residence, 2725 Esplanade 
Avenue ; Hemlock 72. 

Weeks, William E (Colored)— Flint, 1897. 

WEIL, ARTHUR IRVING— Medical School of Harvard 
University, Boston, 1898. Professor of Oto-Laryngology, 
Loyola; Visiting Junior Oto-Laryngologist, Ear, Nose and 
Throat Department, Touro Infirmary; Fellow American 
College of Surgeons. Office, 717 Maison Blanche Annex; 
i-5; Main 5967. Residence, 1500 Eleonore; Uptown 1771. 
Practice limited to Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. 

WEILBAECHER, JOSEPH OSWALD— Tulane, 1916. 
Professor of Botany, Physiology, Materia Medica and 
Pharmacognosy, Pharmacy Department, Loyola. Office, 
1219 Maison Blanche Building; 3-4; Main 3231. Residence, 
1557 North Broad Avenue; Hemlock 1715. General prac- 
tice. 

WEIS, JOSEPH D.— Medical School of Harvard, Univer- 
sity, Boston, 1898. Professor of Tropical and Clinical Med- 
icine, Tulane. Residence, 1448 Jackson Avenue; Jackson 
624. 

WERLEIN, PRESLEY EWING— Tulane, 1914. Resi- 
dence, 3818 Chestnut; Uptown 4329. 

Wherry, Harry Eldridge — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Touro 
Infirmary; Uptown 2684. 

WHITMIRE, ARTHUR LEE— Louisville Medical Col- 
lege ; Professor of Diseases of the Eye, Loyola ; Chief of 
Division of Ophthalmology, Charity Hospital. Office, 1210 
Maison Blanche Building; 11-4; Main 135. Practice limit- 
ed to Diseases of the Eye. 

Whyle, Earl Thomas— Tulane, 1919. Interne Charity 
Hospital; Main 742. { 

Wilbert, B. G.— Tulane, 1906. Not in practice. } 

Williams, C. L. — Epidemiological Aide, U. S. P. H. Serv- } 



79, 



r 
♦ 

I ice, Louisiana State Board of Health. Office, New Court 

I House Building, Conti and Royal; Main 612. 

j Williams, Richard Pericles (Colored — Meharry, 1912.* 

! WILSON, JOHN CALVIN— Tulane, 1919. Imterne, 

I Charity Hospital; Main 742. 

i Wilson, Peter Francis — Tulane, 1902. Residence, 700 

Webster; Uptown 660. 

I WILSON, SOLON G.— Tulane, 1901. Adjunct Professor 

j of Surgery, Loyola; Chief Visiting Surgeon, Division of 

j Surgical Diseases of Children, Charity Hospital; Visiting 

} Pediatrist, Touro Infirmary. Office, 1203 Maison Blanche 

I Building; 3-5; Main 199. Residence, 1809 Peters Avenue; 

j Uptown 551. 

} Winn, John C. — Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hos- 

{ pital; Main 742. 

} Wolff, I. J.— Tulane, 1919. Interne, Charity Hospital; 

I Main 742. 

I WOLF, MONROE— Tulane, 1912. Franklin, Texas. 

j Wunderlich, William — Tulane, 1881. Office and resi- 

I dence, 1627 Melpomene, between Carondelet and St. 

j Charles; Jackson 1361. General pratice. 

♦ 

WYMER, JOSEPH JAMES— Tulane, 1906. Professor 
of Pathology and Clinical Bacteriology, Loyola. Office, 
Suite 620-624 Maison Blanche Building; 2-4; Main 873. Res- 
idence, 118 North Olympia; Galvez 104. 

Wyndham, A. B. — Resident Surgeon, Eye, Ear, Nose and 
Throat Hospital, Elk Place and Tulane Avenue; Main 347. 
Residence, Shelbyville, Texas. 



Y. 



YENNI, ALBERT S.— Tulane, 1897. Office 714 Maison 
Blanche Building; 2-5; Main 3102. Residence, 2629 Canal; 
Galvez 162. 

YONGUE, SAMUEL DUFFIELD— Hospital College of 
Medicine, Louisville, Ky., 1901. Office, 310 Medical Build- 



so 



[ " ~ ] 

I ing; 12-2; Main 1861. Residemce, 3228 General Taylor; ♦ 

Uptown 3210. I 

Z. 

Zengel, Harry Loomis — ^Tulane, 1915. Residence, 928 
St. Ferdinand; Hemlock 2397. 

.1 

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81 



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83 



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! _ ! 

84 



PRACTITIONERS IN SPECIAL BRANCHES 
OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. 



ANATOMY. 

Bayon, H.— 1215 Maison Blanche; 11:30-12:30; Main 1803, 
Crichlow, R. S. — 42 Cusachs Bldg; 12-1:30; Main 5857. 
Thuringer, J. M. — Tulane University. 
Voss, C. H.— 42 Cusachs Bldg; 1-3; Main 5857. 

BACTERIOLOGY AND LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS. 

Adams, G. B. — 707 Maison Blanche Annex; 9-5; Main 752. 

Bass, M. E. — 3513 Prytania; appointment; Uptown 416. 

Couret, Mairice — Maison Blanche Annex. 

D'Aunoy, Rigney— 1626 Maison Blanche; 4-5; Main 2629. 

Duval, C. W.— Charity Hospital ; Main 742. 

Ehlinger, R. B. — Chartiy Hospital; Main 742. 

Friedrichs, A. V. — 1601 Maison Blanche; appointment; 
Main 2321. 

Gomila, F. R.— 506 Machea Bldg; 12-1; Main. 3944. 

Harris, W. H. — 1201 Maison Blanche; 10-12; 1-5; appoint- 
ment; Main 2723. 

Hauser, G. H.— 505 Macheca Bldg; 11-12; Main 3944. 

Johns, F. M. — 803 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-1; 4-6; Main 
3456. 

Lanford, J. A. — Touro Infirmary; 8-5; Uptown 4871. 

Lochte, H. C— 42 Cusachs Bldg; 2:30-3:30; Main 6071. 

Lombard, M. S.— 5335 St Charles; U. S. P. H. S.; Main 
1511 

Mattes, A.— 636 Common St. ; 4-6 ; Main 2323. 

Pothier, 0. L.— 214 Medical Bldg.; 3-5; Main 5703. 

Seemann, W. H.— 505 Macheca Bldg; 1-2; Main 3944. Ji 

Tilly, W. P.— 805 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-1 ; Main 3448. 

Wymer, J. J.— Suite 620-664 Maison Blanche! 2-4; Main. f« 

873. 

CHILDREN. \\ 

Bloom, C. J. — 3529 Prytania; 2-5; Uptovm 816. 

Borey, C. A.— 727 Baronne; 1-4; Main 1510. 

Brand, S F.— 41 Cusachs Bldg; 3 :30-5 ; Main 4506. \\ 

Burt, T. R.— 711 Macheca Bldg; 3-4; Main 19. ;| 




Butterworth, W. W.— 501 Macheca Bldg; 11-4; Main 582. 
Canepa, L. — 727 Baronne; Main 1510. 

Chamberlain, L. C— 1121 Maison Blanche; 4-6; Main 3377. 
Crawford, R.— 3439 St. Charles Ave; 2-3:30; Uptown 565. 
De Buys, L. R. — 1122 Maison Blanche; appointment; Main 

954. 
De Reyna, G. J.— 3529 Prytania; 1-2; Uptown 191. 
Fenner, E. D.— 1915 St Charles Ave.; 2-4; Jackson 47. 
Kinberger, F. J.— 636 Common; 12-1:30; Main 2323. 
Levy, J.— 401 Medical Bldg; 1-2; Main 3220. 
Loeber, Maud — 1464 Milan ; Uptown 2789 ; By appointment. 
Logan, G. K— 1206 Maison Blanche; 11:3-1; Main 2324. 
Mayo, Sara T.— 518 Medical Bldg; 3-5:30; Main 2848. 
McCormick, Etta Pearl— 518 Macheca; 1-3; Main 2848. 
Signorelli, J.— 731 Maison Blanche; 12:30-4; Main 5562. 
Spencer, L. C— 1126 Maison Blanche; 11-1; Main 4264. 
Strong, R. A. — 1222 Maison Blanche; appointment; Main 

1035. 
Tyler, L L.— 3116 Prytania; Uptown 4684. 
Voss, R. C— 1105 Maison Blanche; 16-1; Main 4454. 
Wilson, S. G.— 1203 Maison Blanche ; 3-5 ; Main 199. 

EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

Blackshear, S. M.— 606 Title Guarantee Bldg. 
Boebinger, M. P.— 31 Cusachs Bldg; 1-4; Main 1093. 
Crebbin, J. T.— 1207 Maison Blanche; 1-4; Main 4296. 
De Poorter, L.— 208 Medical Bldg; 11-1; 3-5; Main 1043. 
Dupuy, H.— 208 Medical Bldg; 12-5; Main 1043. 
Escalante, E.— 1720 Foucher. 

Estopinal, J. A.— 314 Medical Bldg; 1-5; Main 5372. 
Fuchs, V. H. — 410 Medical Bldg; 11-1; appoinment; Main 

29. 
Haspel, M. D.— 1214 Maison Blanche; 9-12; 1:30-5; Sun- 
days 9:30-10:30; Main 3095. 
Hume, J. R. — 1126 Maison Blanche; 1-4 and by apopint- 

ment ; Main 4264. 
Johnson, W. M.— Suite 1218-1220 Maison Blanche; 11-5; 

Main 1178. 
Kearney, H. S.— 1101-1105 Maison Blanche Bldg.; 6-5; 

Main 4454. 
Keitz, E. S.— 595 Macheca Bldg; 11-2; Main 3101. 
Landfried, C. J.— Title Guaranty Bldg.; 2-5; Main 3615. 



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Larose, J. B.— 621 Macheca Bldg; 1-4:30; Main 4596. 

Leake, J. P.— 1101-1105 Maison Blanche; 2-5; Main 4454. 

Lynch, R. C— 634 Maison Blanche; 1-4; Main 4575. 

Lynch, W. M.— 634 Maison Blanche; 1-4 Main 4575. 

Martin, J. D.— 3601 Prytania; 1:30-4; Uptown 4564. 

Mitchell, C— 209 Macheca Bldg; 9-4; Main 2392. 

McCarthy, Edward— 1300 Canal; 11-12 and 5-6; Main 1790. 

Mc Shane, A.— 1229 Maison Blanche ; 3-4 ; Main 1920. 

O'Kelley, J. P.— 616 Macheca Bldg; 11-1; 2-4; Main 3363. 

Patton, W. T.— 410 Medical Bldg; 1-3:30 and by appoint- 
ment; Main 29. 
IRyan, J. J. — 1217 Maison Blanche; 1-3 and by appoint- 
. ment; Main 6441. 

} Scheppegrell, W. — 848 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-1 and 

; 3-5 ; Main 132. 

j Sharp, C. H.— 7325 St Charles. 

j Taquino, G. J.— 634 Maison Blanche; Main 4574. 

Waide, D. F.— Suite 311-313 Macheca Bldg ; 2-5 ; Main 3953. 
j Weil, A. I.— 717 Maison Blanche Annex; 1-5; Main 5967. 

} Wyndham, A. B. — Eye Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital. 



EYE. 

Bahn, C. A. — Suite 711-715 Maison Blanche Annex; 9-5; 
Main 5854. 



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I Blum, H. N.— 1211 Maison Blanche ; 10 :30-5 ; Main 2719. 

j Bruns, H. D. — 705 Canal-Commercial Bank Annex; (211 

I Camp) ; Main 3979. 

Crebbin, A. R.— 1207 Maison Blanche; 11-4; Main 4296. 
I Davis, R. A.— 515 Medical Bldg; 11-1 and 2-4; Main 2207. 

I Dimitry, T. J.— 3601 Prytania; 1-5; Uptown 2096. 

I Feingold, M.— 4206 St Charles; 1-4; Uptown 133. 

I Keitz, E. S.— 705 Macheca Bldg ; 11-2 ; Main 3101. 

1 Larose, J. B.— 621 Macheca ; 1-4 :30 ; Main 4596. 

I Mitchell, C— 609 Macheca; 9-4; Main 2392. 

] Mioton, S. F.— 216 Medical Bldg; appointment; Main 6292. 

t Overbay, T. A.— 306 Macheca Bldg; 1-5; Main 1078. 

I Mc Carthy, Edawrd— 1300 Canal; 11-12 and 5-6; Main 

1790. 

Robin, E. A. — 705 Canal-Commercial Bank Annex; (211 
Camp) Main 3979. 

Smith, V. C— 1110 Maison Blanche; 1-5; Main 619. 

Waide, D. F.— 311 Macheca; 2-5; Main 3953. 

Whitmire, A. L.— 1210 Maison Blanche; 11-4; Main 135. 

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Lamothe, F. E.— 1226 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 2629. 
Levin, A. 1^.-1222 Maison Blanche; 6-5; Main 1035. ' 
Simon, S. K. — 3439 St Charles Avenue ; 2-5 and by appoint- 
ment; Uptown 565. 
Storck, J. A.— 508 Medical Bldg. ; 2-5 ; Main 3096. 

GENITO-URINARY AND RECTAL DISEASES. 

Ader, H. F.— 1128 Maison Blanche; 12-1:30 and 3-5; Main 
628. ^ 

Chalaron, F. J.— 1209 Maison Blanche; 10-1 and 3-5; Main 
3406. 

Chassaignac, Charles. — 701 Canal-Commercial Bank An- 
nex; (211 Camp) ; 11-1 and 3-4; Main 3599. 

Delaup, S. P.— 201 Medical Bldg; 12-2 :30 ; Main 3513. 

Gelpi, P. J.— 802 Maison Blanche Annex; 2-4; Main 3448. 

Hume, J.— 724 Baronne; 1-4; Main 4049. ~ 

Kahle, P. J.— Liggett Bldg; 1-5; Main 6323. 

Lindner, H. J.— 519 Macheca Bldg; 1-3; Main 803. 

Mattes, A.— 636 Common; 4-6; Main 2323. 

Mims, Caroline (Women only)— 203 Medical Bldg; 1-5; 
Saturdays 9-11 A. M.; Main 3785. 

Nelken, A.— 503 Medical Bldg; 1-5; Main 3130. 

Pratt, J. G.— 724 Baronne; Main 4049. 

Scharff, E. S.— 511 Medical Bldg; Main 5729. 

Swords, M. W.— 1106 Maison Blanche; 2-4; Main 628. 

HAY FEVER. 

Scheppegrell, W. — 848 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-1, 3-5; 
Main 132. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE. 

Aiken, J. G.— 411 Macheca Bldg.; 11-1; Main 119. 
Bel, G. S.— 509 Macheca Bldg. ; 11-1 :30 ; Main 2713. 
Bernhard, R.— 509 Medical Bldg. ; 11-1 :30 ; Main 2713. 
Eertucci, E. A.— 1115 Maison Blanche; 4:30-6; Main 3367. 
Block, W. H.— 710 Maison Blanche; 3:30-5; Main 5410. 
Caire, A.— 401 Medical Bldg.; 4-5:30; Main 3220. 
Callan, J.— 505 Macheca Bldg.; 3:30-4:30; Main 3944. 
Cole, J. C— 1208 Maison Blanche; 11-12:30; Main 2324. 
D'Aquin, J. J.— 1310 Whitney Central Bank Bldg.; 1:30-3; 
Main 8326. 



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De Verges, P. C— 319 Macheca Bldg. ; 2-4; Main 2415. 

Dubos, Jr.. L. J.— 1203 Maison Blanche; 12-1:30; Main 199. 

Elliott, Jr., J. B. — 801-805 Maison Blanche Annex; Mondays 
and Tuesdays, 9-4; Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fri- 
days, 1-6; No office hours on Saturdays and Sundays. 

Elson, L. N.— 412 Medical Bldg.; 10-12; Main 1541. 

Eshleman, C. L. — 606 Maison Blanche; 1-3; appointment; 
Main 2841. 

Eustis, Allan — 3621 Prytania; hours by appointment; Up- 
town 84. 

Fossier, A. E. — 1216 Maison Blanche; hours by appoint- 
ment; Main 5214. 

Gondolf, H. J.— 1226 Maison Blanche; 1-2; Main 2629. 

Guthrie, J. B.— 1206 Maison Blanche; 1-30-3; Main 2324. 

Halsey, J. T.— 1203 Maison Blanche; 1:30-3:30; Main 199. 

Heninger, B. R.— 1208 Maison Blanche! 2:30-4-30; Main 
2324. 

Jones, H. P. — 3601 Prytania; 2-4; hours by appointment; 
Uptown 4564. 

Lemann, I. I.— 3521 Prytania; 1:30-3:30; Uptown 4683. 

Lewis, J. L.— 421 Medical Bldg.; 3-5; Main 1691. 

Locascio, J. L. — 720 Maison Blanche ; 1-3 ; Main 5958. 

Lopez, C. J.— 420 Godchaux Bldg. ; 10-11, 2-3 ; Main 2303. 

Lyons, R.— 3521 Prytania; 2-4; Uptown 4683. 

Mahler, E. W.— 1210 Maison Blanche; 3-5; Main 135. 

Page, J. H.— 734 Maison Blanche Annex ; 3-5 ; Main 359. 

Pratt, Jr., G. K.— 1203 Maison Blanche ; 3-5 ; Main 199. 

Querens, P. L. — 41 Cusachs Bldg.; 3:30-5; Main 5857. 

Simon, H. T.— 1617 St. Charles avenue. 

Trepagnier, D. H.— 1106 Maison Blanche; 11-12; Main 628. 

NERVOUS SYSTEM. 

Cazenavette, L. L.— 305 Medical Bldg.; 11-1 and 4-5; Main 

4889. 
Connoly, R. M.— 3439 St. Charles ; Uptown 565. 
Daspit, H.— 415 Medical Bldg.; 3-5; Main 4412. 
Gallant, B. F.— Suite 705-709 Maison Blanche Annex; 1-2; 

Main 752. 
Holbrook, C. S. — 3521 Prytania ; 10-12 and by appointment ; 

Uptown 4683. 
Lopez, L. V. J.— 420 Godchaux Bldg.; 11-12 and 3-5; Main 

2303. 



92 



O'Hara, J. A. — 1109 Maison Blanche; 3-6 and by appoint- 
ment; Main 4747. 

Otis, W. J. — 3601 Prytania; 2-5 and by appointment; Up- 
town 4564. 

Reeling, G. F.— 1128 Maison Blanche; 2:30-3:30; Main 
2383. 

Unsworth, C. V.— 212 Medical Bldg.; 2-4:30; Main 2512. 

Van Wart, R McL. — 3521 Prytania; by appointment; Up- 
town 4683. I 

ORTHOPEDICS. * 1 

Hatch, E. S.— 1126 Maison Blanche Bldg.; 3-5 and by ap- } 

pointment; Main 4264. I 

Mcllhenny, P. A. — 3513 Prytania street. } 

Oechsner, J. P.— 621 Macheca Bldg. ; 3-5 ; Main 4596. 1 

O'Ferrall, J. T.— 3439 St. Charles Avenue ; 2-5 ; Uptown 565. ! 

Spencer, L. C. — 1124 Maison Blanche. ♦ 

ROENTGENOLOGY. . | 

Fortier, L. A.— Hotel Dieu ; 9-3 ; Galvez 1300. ^ • 

Granger, A. — 1212 Maison Blanche; 1-4; Main 177. 
Harris, W. H. — Presbyterian Hospital. 



I 

• 

Henriques, A.— 1201 Maison Blanche; 9-5; Main 2321. j 

Lurie, W. A.— 1129 Maison Blanche; 9-4; Main 2383. } 

Magruder, L. W.— 1201 Maison Blanche; 9-5; Main 2321. j 

Menville, L. J.— 1201 Maison Blanche ; 9-5 ; Main 2321. j 

Samuel, E. C. — Touro Infirmary; Uptown 2684. j 



SKIN. 



Dyer, I.— 303 Medical Bldg. ; 2-4 ; Main 4889. } 

Menage, H. E.— 301-303 Medical Bldg.; 1-4; Main 4889. j 

Roussel, J. N.— 719-721 Macheca Bldg.; 11-12; 1:30-3:30; j 

Main 3709. j 

♦ 
SURGERY, GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS. j 



Allen, C. W.— 509 Macheca Bldg. ; 3-5 ; Main 163. ^ I 

Barnett, J.— 401 Macheca Bldg ; 2-4 ; Main 3220. i 

Batchelor, J. M.— 1210 Maison Blanche; 1-2:30; Main 135. j 

Batson, T. T.— 2117 Tulane Avenue ; 12-1 ; Galvez 342. j 

Beatrous, F. T.— 1221 Maison Blanche; 10-11; Main 2713. } 
Bernadas, H. E.— 308 Medical Bldg. ; 1 :30-2 :30 ; Main 4888. 



93 



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Bloch, E.— 717 Maison Blanche; 12-1; Main 2829. 
Bradburn, M.— 3513 Prytania; 2-4; Uptown 416. 
Bradburn, W. P.— 3513 Prytania; 2-4; Uptown 416. 
Brosnan, D. S. — 220 City Park Avenue; by appointment; 

Galvez 379. 
Brown, C. P. — Illinois Central Hospital ; Main 2477. 
Brown, F. T.— 1219 Maison Blanche; 1-2; Main 1178. 
Carter, P. J.— 214 Medical Bldg. ; 12-2 ; Main 5703. 
Cassegrain, 0. C. — 1105 Maison Blanche; 1-2:30; Main 

4454. 
Clark, S. M. D.— 42 Cusachs Bldg. ; 2-3 :30 ; Main 5857. 
Cocram, H. S.— 42 Cusachs Bldg. ; 1-2 :30 ; Main 5857. j 

Cohn, I.— 1211 Maison Blanche ; 2-4 :30 ; Main 2719. I 

Cole, C. G.— 1109 Maison Blanche; 2-4; Main 4747. j 

Cronan, G. A.— 1229 Maison Blanche; 4-5; Main 920. 
Danna, J. A.— 1128 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 2383. 
Dicks, J. F.— 815 Whitney Central Bldg. ; 1-3 ; Main 2015. 
Donaster, Jr., J, J. — 833 North Claiborne; 4-5; Hemlock 

9439. 
Dorrestein, C. A. M.— 1226 Maison Blanche; 3-4:30; Main 

2629. 
Ellis, J. H.— 1210 Maison Blanche; 3-5; Main 135. 
Ficklen, E. A.— 724 Baronne; 1-2; Main 5565. 
Friedrichs, E. D.— 474 Pine ; 1-3 ; Walnut 340. 
Gage, I. M.— Touro Infirmary ; Uptown 2684. 
Geismar, S.— 1104 Maison Blanche; 3-4:30; Main 2612. 
Gelpi, M. J. — 3601 Prytania; by appointment; Uptown 4564. 
Gessner, H. B.— 1105 Maison Blanche; 12:30-2; Main 4454. 
Gladden, Jr., A. H.— 815 Whitney Central Bank Bldg.; 3-4; 

Main 2106. 
Hebert, J. S.— 1121 Maison Blanche; 1-4; Main 3377. 
Hirsch, J. G.— 1232 Maison Blanche; 2:30-4; Main 2435. 
Holderith, C. P.— 734 Maison Blanche Annex; 1-2:30; Main j 

6810. j 

Isaacson, J. E. — 720 Maison Blanche ; 3-5 ; Main 5859. j 

Jacobs, A.— 1128 Maison Blanche; 3:30-5; Main 2383. } 

Jacoby, A.— 412 Medical Bldg. ; 12-2 ; Main 1541. { 

Jurgelwicz, E. A.— 310 Medical Bldg. ; 4-6 ; Main 1861. | 

Keller, A. A.— 1210 Maison Blanche ; 11-12 :30 ; Main 135. } 

King, A. C— 305 Vallette (Algiers) ; 3-4; Algiers 41. { 

King, E. L.— 1201 Maison Blanche ; 1-3 ; Main 2821. } 

Kohlmann, W.— 1232 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 2435. j 



Kostmayer, H. W.— 2117 Tulane Avenue; Galvez 342. 

Lacroix, P. G.— 1211 Maison Blanche; 12-1:30; Main 2719. 

Landry, J. E. — ^Charity Hospital ; Main 742. 

Landry, L. H.^3523 Prytania; 3-5; Uptown 203. 

Larue, F. A. — 1230 Maison Blanche; 12-1 and 4-5; Main 
4454. 

Leake, W. W.— Illinois Central Hospital; Main 2477. 

Leckert, E. L.— 311 Macheca Bldg.; 3:30-5; Main 3953. 

Leidenheimer, H.— 105 Chartres; 12-1; Main 742. 

Levy, L.— 717 Maison Blanche; 2-5; Main 2829. 

Lewis, E. S.— 203 Medical Bldg.; 1-3:30; Main 960. 

Lyons, M. J.-— 1219 Maison Blanche; 12-1; Main 3731. 

Maes, U. — Suite 801-805 Maison Blanche Annex; 2-3; Main 
3456. 

Mainegra, Jr., R. J.— 1109 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 
4477. 

Martin, E. D.— 3513 Prytania; 1-3:30; Uptown 416. 

Matas, R.— 3523 Prytania; 3-5; Uptown 203. 

Michinard, P. — 726 Maison Blanche Annex; 2-4; Main 4109. 

Miller, C. J. — 405 Medical Bldg. ; 1-3 and by appointment ; 
Main 3590. 

Miller, H. E.— 415 Medical Bldg. ; 1-3 ; Main 4412. 

Nelson, H. E.— 1221 Maison Blanche; 1:30-3-30; Main 242. 

Nix, J. T.— 1407 South Carrollton Avenue; Walnut 427. 

Oechsner, J. F.— 621 Macheca; 3-5; Main 4596. 

Parham, F. W.— 3513 Prytania; 1-3:30; Uptown 416. 

Perkins, R. T.— 8320 Oak; Walnut 682. 

Perkins, W. M.— 621 Macheca Bldg.; 1-2:30 Main 4596. 

Phillips, W. D. — 1201 Maison Blanche; 1-3 and by appoint- 
ment; Main 2321. 

Points, J. F.— 714 Maison Blanche; 12-2; Main 3102. 

Provosty, L. M.— 713 Macheca Bldg; 2:30-5; Main 1564. 

Richard, E. J.— 209 Macheca Bldg.; 12:30-2; Main 2392. 

Salatich, P. B.— 1141 Maison Blanche; 2-4; Main 1217. 

Sellers, T. B— 41 Cusachs Bldg. ; 1-3 ; Main 5857. 

Sexton, L.— 214 Medical Bldg; 11-4, 4-5 ; Main 5703. 

Smith, J. W. A.— Liggett Bldg.; 1-3; Main 2323. 

Smyth, J.— 724 Baronne; 3-5; Main 5565. 

Souchon. M.— 1310 Whitney-Central Bank Bldg.; 3-4; Main 
270. 

Stafford, S. W.— Charity Hospital ; Main 762. 

Stone, R. E.— 636 Common; 3-5; Main 2323. 



96 



Talbot, P. T.— 624 Maison Blanche; 11-12, 4-5; Main 873. 

Tedesco, I.— 412 Medical Bldg.; 4-6; Main 1541. 

Tilly, W. P. D.— 802 Maison Blanche Annex; 12-2; Main 

3448. 
Troescher, W. G.— 200 Macheca Bldg; 2-3:30; Main 2392. 
Walet, E. H.— 621 Macheca Bldg. ; 12-2 ; Main 4596. 
Wallbillich, C. A.— Suite 311-313 Macheca Bldg. ; Main 2953. 
Walshe, T. J.— 516 Macheca Bldg. ; 2-4; Main 430. 

TUBERCULOSIS. 

Bertucci, E. A.— 1115 Maison Blanche Bldg.; 4:30-6; Main 

3367. 
Dempsey, J. G.— 702 Macheca Bldg. ; 12-2 ; Main 3454. 
Durel, W. J.— 312 Medical Bldg. 

UROLOGY. 

Devron, J. A.— 1300 Canal Street; 4-6; Main 1790. 

Scott, Jr., J. T.— Liggett Bldg. ; 10-1, 3-5. 

Verdier, C. E.— Suite 707-709 Maison Blanche Annex; 10-4; 

Main 752. 
Walther, H. W. E.— 509 Macheca Bldg. ; 1-5 Main 163. 



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1:30-3:30 M. 199 General Practice | 


Pratt, Jr., G. K. 


3-5 Main 199 General Practice 1 


Sims, H. V. 


5-6 Main 199 General Practice I 


Wilson, S. G. 


3-5 Main 199 Children | 




1207. j 


Crebbin, A. R. 


11-4 Main 4296 Eye 1 


Crebbin, J. T. 


1-4 Main 4296 Ear, N. and T. | 


Joachim, Otto 


10-12; 1-3 M.4296 Ear, N. and T. 




1208. 


Allgeyer, C. E. 


1-230 Main 2324 General Practice 



116 



Cole, J. C. 
Guthrie, J. Birney 
Heninger, B. R. 
Logan, G. K. 



11-12:30 M. 2324 Internal Medicine 

1 :30-3 Main 2324 Internal Medicine 

2:30-4 Main 2324 Internal Medicine 

11:30-1 Main 2324 General Practice 



1209. 
Chalaron, F. J. 10-1 ; 3-5 M. 3406 G.-U. and Rectal 

1210. 
1-2:30 Main 135 
3:30-5 Main 135 
11-12:30 Main 135 
11-4 Main 135 

3-5 Main 135 



Batchelor, J. M. 
Ellis, J. H. 
Keller, A. A. 
Whitmire, A. L. 
Mahler, E. W. 



Surgery 

General Practice 
General Practice 
Eye 
General Practice 



Blum, H. N. 
Cohn, I. 
Lacroix P. G. 
Metz, W. R. 

Granger, A. 

Haspel, M. D. 

Bayon, Henry 
Bloom, J. D. 

Augustin Book 

Agency 
Fossier, A. E. 

Ryan, J. J. 

Brown, F. T. 
Johnson, W. M. 
Rabouin, L. L. 

Lyons, M. J. 
Mouledous, A. D. 
Tusson, George 
Weibaecher, J. 0. 



Eye 

Surgery 
General Practice 



1211. 
10:30-5 Main 2719 
2-4 Main 2719 

12-1:30 Main 2719 
11-12 Main 2719 

1212. 
1-4 Main 177 X-Rays' 

1214. 
9-12 ;l-5 M. 3095 Ear, Nose & Throat. 

1215. 
11-12 Main 1803 
2-4 Main 1803 

1216. 



General Practice 
Surgery 



9-5 
1-3 

1-3 

1-3 
9-5 

4-6 

12-1 
2-3 
1-2 
3-4 



Main 5214 Medical Books 
Main 5214 Internal Medicine 
1217. 

Ear, Nose & Throat 



1218 
Main 1178 
Main 1178 
Main 1178 

1219. 
Main 3231 
Main 3231 
Main 3231 
Main 3231 



General Practice 
Ear, Nose & Throt 
General Practice 

General Practice 
General Practice 
General Practice 
General Practice 



L 



117 



Beatrous, F. T. 
Kavanagh, T. S. 
Nelson, H. E. 



1221. 
10-1 Main 232 Internal Medicine 

3:30-5 Main 242 General Practice 
1:30-3:30 M. 242 Surgery and Obs. 

1222. 



Ledoux, L. A. 


1-2 


Main 1035 General Practice 


Levin, A. L. 


2-5 


Main 1035 Gastro-Enerology 


Silverman, D. N 


11-12 


Main 1035 General Practice 


Strong, R. A. 


12-1 


Main 1035 Children 
1226. 


Chretien, J. F. 


3-5 


Main 2629 General Practice 


D'Aunoy, R. 


4-5 


Main 2629 Lab. Diag. 


Dorrestein, C. A. 


M.3-4:30 


Main 2629 General Practice 


Ernst, 0. F. 


1:30-3 


Main 2629 Internal Medicine 


Faivre, G. W. 


11-12 


Main 2629 General Practice 


Gondolf, H. J. 


1-2 


Main 2629 General Practice 


Lamothe, F. E. 


12-2 


Main 2629 Gastro-Enterology 


Levy, L. H. 


4:30-5:30 M. 2629 Lab. Diag. 


Menendez, J. C. 


12-1 


Main 2629 General Practice 


Oriol, R. A. 


12-1 


Main 2629 General Practice 


Weber, A. 


12-1 


Main 2629 General Practice 
1229. 


Cronan, G. A. 


4-5 


Main 920 General Practice 


Hyman, D. 




Main 920 General Practice 


McShane, A. 




Main 920 Ear, Nose & Throat 


Noha, A. 


2-3 


Main 920 General Practice 
1230. 


Larue, F. A. 


12-1 ; 4-5 M. 2484 General Practice 


Thibaut, P. L. 


1-2 


Main 2484 General Practice 



Lerch 0. 



Hirsch, J. 
Kohlmann, W. 
Levy, W. E. 



1231. 
Mon., Wed. & Fri. Internal Medicine 
9-12 ; Tue., Thur. 
& Sat. 3-6 
Main 1464 

1232. 

2:30-4 Main 2435 General Surgery 

12-2 Main 2435 General Surgery 

3-5 Main 2435 General Surgery 



118 



j I 

j MAISON BLANCHE ANNEX. I 

♦ 



(Formerly Audubon Building.) 
931 Canal St. 



1 Maes, 

1 Rives, 
1 Johns, 


Urban. 
J. D. 
, F. M. 


2-3 
2-3 

11-1, 4-6 


Surgery. 

General , Practice. 
Laboratory Diagnosis. 


1 Suite 814 — Telephone Main 355. 

1 Bell, Thadeus, P. 10-1 General Practice. 


Dunn, 

1 
1 


Suite 819 — Telephone 
J. S. 9 :30-12 1-4 


Main 9211. 
Ear, Nose and Throat. 



I Suite 703— Telephone Main 5798. \ 

\ Gallant, B. F. 2-3 Nervous and Mental. } 

j Suite 705-707— Telephone Main 752 j 

j Adams, G. B. 2-5 Laboratory Diagnosis. [ 

j f 
j Suite 709— Telephone Main 752. . {: 

Verdier, C. E. 10-4 Urology. • " { 

I 

Suite 711— Telephone Main 5854. | 

Bahn, C. A. 9-5 Diseases of the Eyes. 1 

Suite 717— Telephone Main 4104. \ 

Weil, A. I. 1-5 Ear, Nose and Throat | 

Suite 726— Telephone Main 4104. ♦ 

Michinard, P. 2-4 Surgery and Obstetrics. » 

Suite 728— Telephone Main 4193. I 

Couret, M. 12-5 Bacteriology and Lab- I 

oratory Diagnosis. ♦ 

Suite 730— Telephone Main 4193. I 

Hoefeld, A. 0. 1-3 General Practice. ♦ 

Van Studdif ord, M. T. 3 :30-5 General Practice. { 

Suite 734— Telephone Main 6810. | 

Jones, F. N. 3-5 General Practice. { 

Holderith, C. P. 1-2 :30 Surgery and Obstetrics. | 

Page,^J. H. 11-1:30 General Practice. | 

Suite 802— Telephone Main 3448. ♦ 

Gelpi, Paul, J. 2-4 :30 Genito Urinary. I 

Tilly, W. P. 12-1 :30 General Practice. I 

Suite 805— Telephone Main 3456. j 



119 



♦ 



Every 

Doctor and Dentist 

iri 

Louisiana 

Will he included in the 
1921 Edition of 

Augustin's 

Medical 

and 

Dental 

Directory 

17he active worl^ of compilation will begin in a few weeks. 
If^ou have am; suggestions to make, let us hear from you, 

GEORGE AUGUSTIN, Publisher 

New Orleans, La. 



i 



120 



PHYSICIANS HAVING OFFICES OUTSIDE OF THE 
''BUSINESS DISTRCTr 



Angela Street. 
122 Mereaux, L. A. Hemlock 83 

Baronne Street. 

724 Hume, Joseph 1-4 

Main 4049 
724 Jamison, S. C. By Appoinement. 

Main 5565 
724 Smyth, John 3-5 

Main 5565 
724 Pratt, J. G. 1-4 

Main 4049 
727 Borey, C. A. 1-4 

Main 1510 
727 Canepa, L. 1-4 

Main 1510 
1722 Tebault, Jr. C. H 3-5 

Jackson 374 

Bermuda Street. 

230 Maher, Aldea. Algiers 60. 
237 Kiley, R. L. Algiers 158 

Bourbon Street. 

338 Dupaquier, E. M. 9-11; 2-4 
Main 1978. 

Broadway Street. 
912 Asher, P. Walnutl 1859-L. 

Burdette Street. 
830 Tircuit, A. Walnut '808 W. 



General Practice. 

Genito Urinary. 
Internal Medicine, 
Surgery. 
Genito Urinary. 
Children. 
Children. 
General Practice. 



General Practice. 
General Practice. 



General Practice. 



General Practice. 



—4 



121 



Calhoun Street. 
1217 Bouden, Margaret P. H. 

Camp Street. 

1134 Patton, G. F.By Appointment. Consultations. 
Jackson 510 

Canal Street. 

1300 Devron, John A. 4-6 Urology. 

Main 1790 
1300 Ledoux Alexander, 3-4 General Practice. 

Main 1790 
! 1300 Palmisano, D. A. Main 1790 General Practice. 

2120 Brady, C. M. 
♦ 3938 Duggan, M. Linus, Galvez 300 

1 4007 Sickmann, I F. Galvez 1261 

I 4153 Duggan, T. A. Galvez 483 

J Carondelet Street.' 

1118 McCarthy, E. Main 5381 Ear, Nose and Throat. 
481.8 Bloom, H. A. Uptown 3417 

Chippewa >^^r»3et. 
3153 Sauter, C. F. By Appointment. 

City Park Avenue. 

220 Brosnan, D. S. By Appointment. Surgery. 
Galvez 379 

Coliseum Street. 

2311 Holt, Joseph. By Appointment. General Practice. 
j Uptown 2697 

Dauphine Street. 

3701 Szabary, Latzi. 8-9; 3-5 General Practice. 

Hemlock 9424 

Delaronde Street. 

j 317 Adams, J. R. 8-9 2-3 General Practice. 

I Algiers 148 

122 



Dryades Street. 
2003 Stumpf, G. A. 8-9; 3-4 General Practice. 

Jackson 692 

Elmira Avenue. 

276 Babin, A. J. 12-2 General Practice. 

Algiers 575-J 

Elysian Fields Avenue. 

1304 Tudury, R. A\ 3-4 • General Practice. 

Hemlock 2236-J. 

Esplanade Avenue. • 

3090 Roeling, H. W. 3-5 General Practice. 

Hemlock 1364 

Freret Street. 
5012 Sambola, A. B. Uptown 3338-W. General Practice. 

Jackson Avenue. 

1422 Macdiarmid, G. A By Appointment. 

Jackson 1480 General Practice 

1539 Weis, J. D. General Practice. 

1758 Pettit, W. B. Jackson 454 

Jeannette Street. j 

8831 Newmark, G. L. Wilcox I 

- 

Louisa Street. I 

930 Nothacker, H. S. 3-5 General Practice. ;; 

Hemlock 149 
930 Nothacker, Wm. 8-9 " General Practice. : 

Hemlock 149 

Louisiana Avenue. | 

1200 Leake, W. W Uptown 382 | 

- 

123 



Magazine Street. 
1800 Burger, 0. J. 3-4 General Practice. 

Phone Jackson 9179 
1800 Graves, W. E. 
5023 Hunter, Josiah I. 2-3 General Practice. 

Uptown 1346 

Magnolia Street. 
1409 Brennan, L. A. J. 

Jackson 924-J. 
4007 Tichnor, Jr., G. H. 

Uptown 2318-W. 

Melpomene Street 
1525 Derbofen, J. C. General Practice. 

Jackson 790. 
1627 Wunderlich, W. General Practice. 

Jackson 1361 

Milan Street. 
1424 Loeber, M. By Appointment Pediatrics. 
Upown 2789 

Napoleon Avenue. 
618 Dabney, Thomas Smith, General Practice. 

Uptown 694 

North Claiborne Street. 
909 Bornio, D. 12-2 General Medicine. 

Hemlock 304 
833 Donaster, Jr. 4-5 General Surgery. 

Hemlock 9439 
1535 Rappanier, E. A. 8-9 General Practice 

Hemlock 607 



North Rampart Street. 
1023 Gabert, Hugo A. 8-9; 2-4 General Practice. 



Hemlock 190 



1940 Lines, D. A. 



Hemlock 1658 



General Practice. 



Oak Street. 
8320 Perkins, R. T. General Surgery. 

Walnut 682 



Pollock, J. E. 



Opelousas Avenue. 
Algiers 172 



Pelican Avenue. 
715 Weaver, W. H. Algiers 141 General Practice. 

Peters Avenue. 
910 Jauquet, Clotilde 

Uptown 316 

Pine Street. 
474 Friedrichs, E. D. 1-3 Surgery and Obstetrics. 

Walnut 340 



Polymnia Street. 



Boudousquie, G. C. 



Port Street. 
1200 Kelly, E. S. General Practice. 

Hemlock 9485 

Prytania Street. 
1734 Cirino, Joseph W. General Pracice. 



3116 Tyler, L. I. 



Jackson 227 



Uptown 4684 



Children. 



Prytania Street. 
3500 Block, Aline to Foucher. 



Toicro Infirmary. 

Bowie, E. R. 
Gage, I. M. 
Knolle, W. A. 
Pitkin, A. P. 



UptowTi 2664 
Uptown 2664 
Uptown 2664 
Uptown 2664 



Lanford, J. A. Uptown 4871 
Samuel, E. C. Uptown 1880 



Interne. 

Interne. 

Interne. 

Interne. 

Laboratory Diagnosis. 

Roentgonology. 



125 



*'l 



We Will 

Lend you any Medical Book 
or Medical Journal you may 
wish to consult for : : : : : : 

2 5 -cents Per Week 



Annual Subscription to Reference 
Bureau, $10, payable in advance 



Augmtin Library of Medical Research 

1216 Maison Blanche building, Thone Main 5214 
Hours: 10 Jl. M. to 5 "P. M. and hy appointment 

1115 Louisiana Jlvenue, T^hone Uptown 1067 
Hours: By Appointment 



126 



Prytania Street. j 


3500 Block. 




(Opposite Touro Infirmary.) | 


3513 Bass, M. E. By Appointment. Clinical Labora- j 




tory Diagnosis. { 


Upown 416 


♦ 
j 


3513 Bradburn, Muir. 2-4 


Surgery. J 


Uptown 416 


1 


3513 Bradburn, W. P. 2-4 


Surgery. j 


Uptown 416 


\ 
{ 


3513 Martin, E. D. 1-3 :30 


Surgery. j 


Uptown 416 




3513 Parham, F W. 1-3 :30 


Surgery. j 


Uptown 416 




3513 Mcllhenny, P. A. 12-3 


Orthopedics. j 


Uptown 416 


1 


3521 Duncan, A. K., 


( 


Uptown 4683 


1 


3521 Lemann, I. I. 1 :30-3 :30 


Internal Medicine. i 


Uptown 4683 


i 


Lyons, R. 2-4 


Internal Medicine. ( 


Uptown 4683 


1 
( 


Holbrook, C. S. 10-12 


Neurology. 


Uptown 4683 


i 


3521 Van Wart, R. M.,By Appontment Neurology. j 


Uptown 4683 


j 


3523 Landry, L. H. 3-5 ; Uptown 


203 Surgery. j 


3523 Matas, R. 3-5 ; Uptown 203 Surgery. j 


3523 Newman, J. W. 11-12 ; Uptown 203 Surgery & Obstetrics j 


3529 Bloom, C. J. 2-5 ; Uptown 


191 Children. ' j 


3529 De Reyna, G. J. 2-5 ; Uptown 


191 Children. j 


3601. (Diagnostic Clinic Building.) j 


Telephones Uptown 4564 and Uptown 2096. 


Dimitry, T. J. 1-5 


Ophthalmology. j 


Gelpi, M. J. By appointment. 


Surgery & Gynecology. j 


Jones, H. P. 2-4 


Internal medicine & 




Diagnosis. 


Martin, J. D. 1 :30-4 


Ear, Nose & Throat. | 


Marchand, J. L. 





127 



Otis, W. J. 
Nicolle, H. T. 



2-5 Neuro-Psychiatry. 

3621 Eustis, A. C. By appointment; Internal Medicine. 



St. Charles Street. 

535 Lombard, M. S. Main 1511 Public Health. 

919 Mayer, C. R. 9-10 :3-4 ; Main 3432 General Practice. 



1617 
1915 

6403 
3439 

3439 
3439 
3439 
3439 
4206 



Simon, H. T. 
Fenner, E. D; 



St. Charles Avenue. 



2-4 ; Jackson 47 



Orthopedic Surgery 
and Children. 
Souchon, E. Jackson 72 Retired. 

Connoly, E. McC. 11-12 and by appont- Neuro-Psychiatry. 
ment; Uptown 565 

2-5 ; Uptown 565 Orthopedic Surgery. 
2-3 :30 ; Uptown 565Children. ^ 
2-3 :30 ; Uptown 565Children. 
2-5 ; Uptown 565 Digestive System. 
1-4 ; Uptown 133 Ophthalmolog5^ 



OTerrall, J. T. 
Crawford, Rena 
Williams, 
Simon, S. K. 
Feingold, M. 



3057 



1339 



Saint Claude Street. 
Chetta, Frank Hemlock 934 

Saint Mary Street. 
Stubbs, J. G. 8-9 ; 3-4 ; Jackson 2245 General Practice 



Saratoga Street. 
4322 Monette, G. N. General Practice. 



Second Street. 
729 Irwin, J. J. 

Watson, D. L. 8-9 ; 3-5 ; Jack| 213 General Practice. 

South Carrollton Avenue. 

933 Mercier, C. SWalnut 1114 General Practice. 

1407 Nix, J., J. T. Walnut 427 Surgery. 

1407 Perret( J. M. 1-3; Walnut 165 Surgery. 



^m » » ■ ■ 



__1 



128 



♦ 
I 

South Rampart Street. ♦ 

243 Otto, H. J. 4-6; Main 9377 General Practice. | 

♦ 

Tulane Avenue. . 1 

Hotel Dieti. ♦ 

t 

Fortier, L. A. 9-3 Roentgeoology. 



Galvez 1300 i 

Murphy, D. J. Galvez 1300 Resident Physician. j 

Opposite Hotel Dieu. 

2117 Kostmayer, H. W. Surgery and Obstetrics. 

2117 Batson, T. T. 12-1 Surgery and Obstetrics. 

3031 Salerno, E. F. 'Galvez 342 General Practice. 

Washington Avenue. 

806 Mainegra, Sr., R. J. 8-9: 3-4 General Practice. 

Uptown 3294 

Verret Sreet. 

205 King, A. C. 9-10; 3-4 Surgery and Obstetrics. 

Algiers 41 



129 



The Presbyterian Hospital 



I of New Orleans 



I 719-739 Carondelet Street 

I 



I A Modern Hospital at Reasonable Rates. 



Fully Equipped Pathological Laboratory and 
X-Ray Departments. 

A Training School for Ni 



J /\ J raining ocnool tor iNurses. 
♦ 

♦ 

♦ 



I Corinne Casanas Free Clinic for the Poor 



824-828 Girod Street 



130 



i PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. j 


1 HERMANN B. GESSxNER, M. D. 

1 PRACTICE LIMITED TO GEN- 
1 ERAL SURGERY. 
' Office: 1105 Maison Blanche Bldg. 
Hours: 12:30 to 2 P. M., and by 
Appointment. 
Phone Walnut 1053. Phone M. 4454. 


EDWARD S. HATCH, M. D. | 

1124 Maison Banche Bldg., 1 

Phone Main 4264. ♦ 

Hours: 3 to 5, and by Appointment. ^ 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO ORTHO- | 

PEDIC SURGERY. f 


LUCIEN A. FORTIER, M. D. 

ROENTGENOLOGIST 

Hotel Dieu, 

New Orleans, La. 

Hours: 9 to 12; 2 to 5, and by 

Appointment. 


L. DE POORTER, M. D. | 

DISEASES OF THE EAR, NOSE 1 
AND THROAT. } 

MEDICAL BUILDING. { 

Hours: 11 to 1; 3:30 to 5:30. J 
Phone Main 1043. ♦ 


J. A. O'HARA, M. D. 

1109 Maison Blanche Bdg. 

Phone Main 4747. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO DIS- 
EASES OF THE NER- 
VOUS SYSTEM. 


DR. HENIilQT'ES' X-RAY AND RADIUM } 

LABORATORY, J 

1201 Maison Blanche. { 

DRS. HENRIQUES & MEN- | 
VILLE. 1 

ASSOCIATES: | 

Dr. L. W. MAfiuDKR Dr. W. G. Milhollaxd ♦ 

NEW ORLEANS. ♦ 


MAURICE J. GELPI, M. D. 

CHARITY HOSPITAL, 
NEW ORLEANS, LA. 

Residence: 3720 Canal Street. 


PHILIPS J. CARTER, M. D. ! 
214 MEDICAL BUILDING. | 


E. J. DE BERGUE, M. D. 

Residence: 2024 Carondelet St. 

Phone Jackson 349. 

Phones Main 148 and 4282. 

Office: Maison Blanche Bdg. 

Hour: 11 to 12. Phone Main 4747. 


W. MARVYN JOHNSON, M. D. J 

NOSE, THROAT AND EAR. 1 

Office: 1218 and 1220 Maison » 
Blanche Building. J 

Hours: 9 to 5. Phone Main 1178. | 


F. A. OVERBAY, M. D. 

OCULIST. 

306 MACHECA BLDG. 

Hours: 1 to 5. 


ARTHUR I. WEIL. M. D. { 
EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. } 

717 Maison Blanche Annex. ♦ 
Phone Main 5067. Hours: 1 to 5. ♦ 


E. J. RICHARD, M. D. 

209 MACHECA BUILDING. 

Phone Main 2392. 

Residence: 3507 Canal Street. 

Phone Galvez 481. 


ROBT. A. CORBIN, M. D. ! 

636 COMMON STREET. | 

Hours : 2 to 5, by Appointment. | 

Office Phone Main 2323. t 

Residence Phone Walnut 888. { 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



J. M. KOELLE, M. D. 



PHONE HEMLOCK 421. 



DRS. R. C. 5c W. M. LYNCH 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO EAR, 
EAR. NOSE AND THROAT. 

Office. 634 Maison Blanche. 

Hours : 1 to 4 P. M,, by Appointment. 

Phone Main 4575. 



F. J. KIXBERGER, M. D. 

lUSKASES OF INFANCY AND 

CHILDHOOD. 

Office: 0:ji; Common St. (Liggett Bldi 

Hours : 12 to 1 :30 P. M. 

Phone Main 2P>23. 

]:.-iil''nce : 4021 Camp SVi-oei. 

I'liMiic I'plown 272."). 



DRS. LANDRY & KOSTMAYER 

2117 TULANE AVENUE 

(Opposite Hotel Dieu). 

(Consultations by Appointment.) 

Phone Galvez 932. 



AV H. KNOLLE, M. D. 

Office: Rooms 210-213 Medical Bldg. 

Hours: 1 P. M. to 3 P. M. 

Telephone Main 2512. 

Residence: 3920 Cleveland Ave., 

Telephone Galvez 174. 

LOLIS CANEPA, M. D. 

Residence: 806 Esplanade Ave., 

Phone Hemlock 162. 

Office: 727 Baronne Street. 

Hours: 11 to 1. Phone Main 1510. 

J. .M. BAMBER, M. D. 

636 COMMON STREET. 

Hours: 3 to 5. 

Residence Phone Galvez 1557-J. 



T. T. BATSON, M. D. 

2117 TULANE AVENUE. 

Hours: 12 to 1. 

Phone Galvez 932. 

Residence Phone Uptown 4224. 

WALLACE J. DUREL, M. D. 

Medical Director 
■ 'THE DRADOM." 

Tuberculosis Sanitoriurh, 

Covington, La. 

New Orleans Office: 312 Medical 

Bldg. Phone Main 3416. 

W. D. PHILLIPS, M. D. 

1201 MAISON BLANCHE BLDG. 

Houiis: 1 to 3 P. M., and by 

Appointment. 

L. L. CAZENAVETTE, M. D. 

Medical Building, 124 Baronne Street. 

Hours: 11 to 1, and by Appointment. 

Office Phone Main 4889. 

Residence Phone Hemlock 49. 

JOHN G. PRATT, M. D. 

724 BARONNE STREET. 

Hours: 12 to 4:30. 

Telephones : 

Office Main 4049. 

Residence Uptown 1200. 



A. MATTES, \L D. 

Office: 636 Common St. (3rd floor) 

Residence: 1712 Baronne St. 

Office Phone Main 2323. 

Residence Phone Jackson 1401. 

Hours: 1-2 and 4-6. 



JC:)HN F. DICKS, M. D. 

315 Whitney-Central Building, 

New Orleans. 

Telephones: 

Office Main 2015. 

Residence Walnut 2087. 

Office Hours: By Appointment. 



.««>4 



1.32 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



ARTHUR WHITAIIRE, M D. 

OCULIST. 

1210 Maison Blanche. 

Hours: 11 to 4. Phone Main 135. 


F. TEMPLE BROWN, M. D. 

GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS 

Residence: No. 7 Rosa Park, 

Phone Uptown 3862. 

Office: 1218-1220 Maison Blanche, 

Phone Main 1178. 
Hours: 1 to 3, and by Appointment. 


J. J. WYMER, M. D. 

Office: 620r622 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Telephones : 
Main 873. 
Galvez 104. 


OSCAR W. BETHEA, M. D. 

1735 CARROLLTON AVENUE. 

Offices: 1203 Maison Banche Bldg.; 

Hours: 10 to 11. 1637 Carrollton 

Avenue; Hours: 4 to 7. 

NEW ORLEANS. 


CHAS. A. BAHN, M. D. 

OCULIST. 

Suite 711-13-15 Audubon Bldg. 

Hours: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. 

Phone M^in 5854. 


A. L. LEVIN, M. D. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE : SPECIAL AT- 
TENTION TO DISEASES OF STOMACH 
AND BOWELS. 
Office Suite 1222 Maison Blanche Bldg. 
Hours 2 to 5. 
Phone Main lOS.l. 
Residence : 727 Pine Street. 
Phono Walnut G40. 


M. J. LYONS, M. D. 

1219 MAISON BLANCHE 

Residence Phone Uptown 1433-W. 

Office Phone Main 3231. 


C. A. M. DORRESTEIN, M. D. 

Maison Blanche Building. 

GENERAL SURGERY. 

Office Hours: 2:30 to 4 P. M. 


R. A. ORIOL, M. D. 

Residence: 1808 Ursuline Ave., 

Phone Hemlock 530. 

Office: 1226 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Hour: 12 to 1. Phone Main 2629. 


O. F. ERNST, M. D. 

Residence : 911 State Street. 

Phone Uptown 12.j0. 

Offices : Maison Blanche. Hours 1 :30 to 
3 :30 P. M : Phone Main 2G20. State 
and Magazine Streets. Hours 8 to 9 A. 
M. : Sundays 12 to 1 : Phone Uptown 

258. 


Dr. R. M. Tan Wart. Dr. C. S. Holbrook. 

DRS. VAN WART & HOLBROOK 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO NERVOUS AND 

MENTAL DISEASES. 

3521 Prytania Street. 

Consultation, by Appointment, 


P. JORDA KAHLE, M D'. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO GENITO- 
URINARY AND RECTAL 
DISEASES. 

Office: 636 Common Street. 
Hours: 1-6. Phone Main 2323. 


LUCIEN LeDOUX, M. D. 

1222 MAISON BLANCHE. 

Residence Phone Uptown 4375-L. 

Office Phone Main 1035. 

Hours: 1 to 2. 


CHAS. X. CHAVIGNY, M. D. 

Suite 1203 Maison Blanche 

Hours: 11:30 to 1:30. 

Phone Main 199. 

Residence: 5515 Hurst Street. 

Phone Ui)town 72. 



133 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



H. BAYON, M. D. 

Office 1215 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Residence: 2212 Napoleon Avenue. 

Phone Uptown 3113. 

Hours: 11 to 12. 

Phone Main 1803. 



F. THEO. BEATROUS, M. D. 

Office: 1221 Maison Banche. . 

Phone Main 242. 

Hours: 11 to 1. 

Residence: 1034 City Park Ave. 

Phone Galvez 399. 

J. O. WEILBACHER, M. D. 

Office: 1219 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours: 3 to 4 P. M. 

Phone Main 3231. 

Residence : 1557 N Broad Avenue. 

Phone Hemlock 1715. 

DAVID HYMAN, M. D. 

Office: 1229 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours: 1 to 2. 

Phone Main 920. 

Residence: 3227 Canal Street. 

Phone Galvez 8. 

FELIX A. LARUE, M. D. 

Office: 1230 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Office Phone Main 2484. 

Office Hours: 12 to 1 and 4 to 5. 

Residence: 1631 Constantinople St. 

Residence Phone Uptown 211. 

H. W. E. WALTHER, M. D. 

UROLOGY. 

509 Macheca Building. 

Phone Main 163. 

Hours: 1 to 5. 

IF IT'S 

MEDICAL BOOKS 

SEE 

AUGUSTIN 



F. M. JOHNS, M. D. 



CLINICAL 



LABORATORY 
NOSIS. 



DIAG- 



Hours 11 to 1 and 4 to 6. 

Phone Main 3456. 

803 Audubon Building. 



G. F. COCKER, M. D. 

Residence: 5941 Magazine Street. 

Hours: 7 to 8:30 A. M., 6 to 7 P. ML 

Phone Uptown 30. 

Office : 720 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours: 10 to 12. 

Phone Main 5958. 



R. S. CRICHLOW, M. D. 

41 Cusach Building. 

Residence: 7037 Freret Street. 

Residence Phone Walnut 1485. 

Office Phone Main 6071. 

Office Hours: 12 to 1 P. M. 

RUSSELL E. STONE, M. D. 

SURGERY. 

636 Common Street. 

Hours: 3 to 5. 

Office Phone Main 2323. 

J. J. RYAN, M. D. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF 

THE EAR, NOSE AND THROAT, 

BRONCHOSCOPY .\ND ESO- 

PHAGOSCOPY. 

1217 Maison Blanche Building, 
New Orleans. 

J. P. O'KELLEY, M. D. 

PRACTICE LT:NnTED TO DISEASES OF 

BAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

Office: 610 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 11 A. M. to 4 P. M. 

Phono Main 3363. 

Residence : 1701 Marensro Street. 

Phone Uptown l.")77. 

E. S. KEITZ, M. D. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. 

706 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 11 to 2 and by Appointment. 

Office Phone Main 3101. 

Residence Phone Hemlock 192. 



134 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



II. Dickson Bruns, M. D. 



E. A. Robin. M. D. 



DRS. BRUNS & ROBIN 

Tulanc-Newcomb Building, 211 Camp Street. 

Hours : 9 to 4 P. M. and by Appointment 

Telephone Main .3979. 



JOS. M. HOUNTHA, M. D. 

Residence : 1239 Dryades Street, 
Phone Jackson 1504. 
Offices : Harvey's Pharmacy. Dryades and 
P^rato Sts. i^ Hours: 3 to 3:30; Pnones 
Jackson 9113 and 1900. Suite: 711 
Macheca Building ; Hours : 4 to 5 ; 
Phone Main 19. 



JOS. T. SCOTT, M. D. 
Office: 636 Common St. (3rd floor). 
Office Phone Main 2323. 
Office Hours: 10 to 1; 3 to 5. 
Residence: 1641 State Street, 
Residence Phone Walnut 2062. 

J. A: LEWIS, \L D. 

Office: Cusach Building. 

Phone Main 6071. 

Hours: 11 to 12. 

Residence: 8011 Sycamore St. 

Phone Walnut 2750. 

L. M. PROVOSTY, :VI. D. 

713 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 2 to 5 P. M. 

Phone Main 1564. 

DANIEL J. MURPHY, M. D. 

HOUSE PHYSICIAN HOTEL DIEU 

Office: 702 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 2:30 to 3:30 P. M. 

Phone Main 3454. 

Residence 2517 Baronne Street. 

Phone Jackson 1061. 

T. R. BURT, M. D. 

208 Medical Building. 

Hours: 2 to 3. 

Phone Main 19. 

Residence: 2121 Baronne Street. 

Phone Jackson 931. 
Office Hours: 8-9 A. M., 4-5 P. M. 



L. DE POORTER, M. D. 

DISEASES OF THE EAR, NOSE 
AND THROAT. 

710 Macheca Building. 
Hours: 11 to 1, 3:30 to 5:30. 

H. LEIDENHEIMER, M. D. 

105 CHARTRES STREET, 
New Orleans. 

W. A. LOVE, M. D. 

Cusachs Building. 

Phone Main 3249. 

Hours: 2 to 5 P. M. 

Phone Residence Uptown 297. 

B. A. LEDBETTER, M. D. 

710 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 12 M. to 2 P. M. 

Telephones: Residence Uptown 75, 
Office Main 5410. 

J. L. LEWIS, M. D. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE. 

421-422 Macheca Building. 

Office Hours: 3 to 5 P. M. and by 

Appointment. 
Phone Uptown 1267. Phone Main 1591. 



=1. I 



ADOLPH HOEPELD, M. D. 

Office: 732-736 Audubon Building. 

Hours: 12 to 2. 

Residence: 926 City Park Avenue. 

Phone Galvez 1125. 

New Orleans, La. 

IF IT'S 

MEDICAL BOOKS 

SEE 

AUGUSTIN 



135 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



Dr. C. W. Duval 

Telephones, Residence, Walnut 1291 

Office Walnut 2332 

Main 742 



Dr. John A. Lanford 

Telephones, Residence Uptown 4634 

Office Walnut 2332 

Uptown 487 1 



DRS. DUVAL & LANFORD 

PATHOLOGISTS and BACTERIOLOGISTS 

Laboratories : Tulane University, Charity Hospital, Touro Infirmary 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS IN PATHOLOGY. BACTERIOLOGY. 
SEROLOGY AND CHEMISTRY. INCLUDING AUTOPSIES ANO EPIDEMIOLOGICAL 
SURVEYS. AND THE TREATMENT FOR RABIES^AND OTHER INFEC IIONS REQUIRING 
THE USE OF BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTS SUCH AS VACCINES AND ANTITOXINb. 



J. W. A. SMFFH, M. D. 


JOS. A. ESTOPINAL. M.D. 


Phone Main 2323. 

Residence: 3435 Constance St. 

Residence Phone Uptown 3658. 

Office: St. Charles and Common. 


EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

SUITE314 MEDICAL BUILDING, 

Phone Main 5372. 

Hours : I to 5 P. M. 


W. KOHLMANN, M .D. 


VAL H. FUCHS, M. D. 


Room 1232 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 11:30 A. M. to 2 P. M. 

Phone Main 2435. 


EAR, NOSE, THROAT. 

410 MEDICAL BUILDING, 

New Orleans. 

Phones : Main 29, Hemloclc 832 

Hours : 11 to 1, and by Appointment. 


JOHN STGNORELLI, M. D. 

PEDIATRICS. 

731 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 12 to 1 : 30 and by Appointment 

Office Phone Main 5562. 

Residence Phone Hemlock 1239. 


E. McCarthy, m. d. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

1118 Carondelet Street, 

Phone Main 5381. 

Hours : 12 to 2, 5 to 7 P. M. 


C. J. BORDENAVE, M. D. 


M. W. SWORDS, M. D. 


Residence, 1937 Ursuline Street, 

Phone Hemlock 1390. 

Office : .305 Medical Building, 

Main 4215. 


OFFICE, HOG MAISON BLANCHE 
BUILDING. 

Telephone, Main G2S. 
Hours : 1 to 4. 


ROBERT ALFRED DAVIS, M.D 


HENRY J. Ol lO, M. D. 


OCULIST. 

Suite 513-14-15 Medical Building, 

Phone Main 2207. 

Hours : 9 to 5, and by Appointment. 


Office, 243 S. Rampart St., Cor. Gravier. 

Hours : 12 to 1, and by Appointment. 

Phone Main 9377. 

New Orleans, La. 


IJosidence I'honc : Office Phone : 

Uptown 1140 Main 4109. 

PAUL MICHINARD, M. D. 

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY' 

Residence, 2104 General Tershing Street. 
Office, 726 Audubon Building. 

Hours: 1:39 to 4. and by Appointment. 


PH. C. DeVERGES, M. D. 

U. S. Reg. No. 1502. La. Reg. No. 1101. 

Residence, 4318 Canal Street, 

Phone Galvez 114. 
Office, 319 Macheca Building, 

Phone Main 2415. 
Hours : 2 to 4. 



136 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



])j;. W. II. JlAl'.KI.S. I'U. A. V. FUIEDUICHS. 



Laboiatorios : Tulanc Iniversity and 
Presbyleiiau Hospital. 



DRS. HARRIS & FRIEDRICHS 

I'ATIIOr.OGISTS AND BACTERIOLOGISTS 
Office : 1201 Maison Blanche Bldg., 



Iloni'S : 1' 



uiid 1-r, 



Xi:W OKLKAN; 



RIGNEY D'AUNOY, M. D. 
BACTERIOLOGY 

— and — 
PATHOLOGY. 


E. S. LEWIS, M. D. 

Office: Medical Building, 124 Ba- 
ronne Street. 

Hours: 1 to 3. 

Phone Main 960. 


RANDOLPH LYONS, M. D. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE. 

3521 Prytania Street. 


P. ALBERT MOORE, M. D. 

Residence: 1424 Philip Street. 

Phone Jackson 397. 

Office: Canal and Chartres (over 

Drug Store.) 

Phone Main 673. 

Office Hours: 1 to 3. 


A. K. DUNCAN, U. D. 

3521 Prytania Street. 

Hours: 1 to 3 P. M., and by 
Appointment. 


MARION SOUCHON, M. D. 

Consultation Hour: 3 to 4 P. M. 

By Appointment : 11 A. M. 

Office: i:]10 Wliitney-Contral Bank Bldg., 

Cor. St. Charles and Gravier Sts. 

For Infoiniation Telephone Office any Time 

Between and ."•. 

I'hone Main 270. 


WALTER J. OTIS, M. D. 
NEURO-PSYCHIATRY, 
3601 Prytania Street. 
Hours: 3-5 Daily (Sundays Ex- 
cepted and by Appointment. 
Phones: Office, Uptown 4564. Res., 
Uptown 230. 


P. L. QUERENS, M. D. 

Residence, 2016 Baronne Street. 

Phone Jackson 735-L. 

Se Habla Espaiiol. 

Office: Cusach's Building, 

Canal and Baronne Streets. 

Phone Main 6071. Hours: 3:30 to 5. 


J. J. D'AQUIN, M. D. 

Residence: 1660 Robert Street. 

Phone Uptown 23. 

1310 Whitney Bank Bldg. 

Hours: 1:30 to 3 P. M. 

Phone Main 3326. 


WM. G. TROESCHER, M. D. 

Residence: 1102 Gen. Pershing St. 

Phone Uptown 1400. 

Hours: 5 to 6 P. M. 

Office: 209 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 2 to 3:30. Phone Main 2392. 


WILLIAM M. HAYES, M. D. 

(Over Levy's Drug Store, Canal and 
Chartres.) 

Hours: 3-4 P. M. 
Residence Phone Main 3812. 


IF ITS 

MEDICAL BOOKS 

SEE 

AUGUSTIN 



131 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



WII/rON P. TILLY, 2sL D. 

MAISON BLANCHE ANNEX. 

Office Hours: 12 to 2 P. M. 

Phone Main 3448. 

Residence: 2625 Ursuline Avenue, 

Phone Hemlock 63. 

JOHN S. DUNN, M. D. 

Phone Main 9211. 

' Residence Phone Walnut 2573-W. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

819-21 Maison Blanche Bdg. Annex 

(Formerly Audubon Bldg.) 

Hours: 9:30 to 12; 1 to 4. 



A. G. FRIEDRICHS, M. D. 



DENTAL SURGEON. 



Office : 825 Maison Blanche Building. 



HENRY J. LINDNER, M. D. 

GENITO-URINARY. 
Residence: 5653 Woodlawn Place, 
Phone Galvez 84. 
Office: 519 Maeheca Bldg. 
Hours: 4 to 5 P. M. and by Appoint- 
ment. Phone Main 804. 

THOS. S. KAVANAGH, M. D. 
Residence: 2351 Magazine Street, 

Phone Jackson 54. 
Office: 1221 Maison Blanche, 

Phone Main 242. 

Hours: 3:30 to 5. 

JOSEPH C. MENENDEZ, M. D. 

Office: 1226 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hour: 12 to 1 P. M. 

Phone Main 2629. 

Residence: 117 No. Clark Street, 

Phone Galvez 1947. 

FREDERICK L. FENNO, M. D. 
1121 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 11 to 12. 
Residence Phone Uptown 4588. 
Office Phone Main 3377. 



P. W. BOHNE, M. D. 

620 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 12-2. 

Phone Main 873. 

Residence: 1722 Jackson Avenue, 

Phone Jackson 191. 

H. A. VFAZIE, M. D. 

Office : Koom 320 Maeheca Bldg., 

Phone Main 2415. 

Office Honi-s : 10 to 12 A. M. ; 7 to 8 P M 

Night Hours. 830 Canal Street. 

Residence: 11 0.") I'rytania St.. Cor. Calliope., 

Phone Main 4120. 

NEW ORLEANS. 

J. R. HUME, M. D. 

Suite 1124-26 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Office Hours: 1 to 4 P. M., 

And by Appointment. 

Office Phone Main 4264. 

Residence Phone Uptown 1581. 

M. P. BOEBINGER, M. D. 
EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 
NEW ORLEANS. 

Telephones: Office, Main 1093. Res- 
idence, Jackson 642. 
Office Hours : 1 to 4 P. M. 



ADOLPH NOHA, M. D. 

Residence : 726 Mandeville Street, 

Phone Hemlock 2107. Hours : 8 to 9 A. M. 

Offices : 1229 Maison Blanche Bldg., 2 to 
3 P. M., Phone Main 920. Royal Cut-Rate 
Pharmacy, Royal and Ursuline, 12 to 1 
P. M., Phone Hemlock 9412. 



O. C. CASSEGRAIN, M. D. 

1105 MAISON BLANCHE BLDG., 

Hours : 1 to 2 : 30, and by Appointment. 

Residence: 1936 S. Carrollton Ave. 

Phone Walnut 188. 

Office Phone Main 4454. 

D. FRED WAIDE, M. D. 
EYE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. 
Suite 312-313 Maeheca Building. 

NEW ORLEANS. 
Hours: 2 to 5. Phone 3953. 



138 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



LOUIS LEVY, M. D. 

717 MAISON BLANCHE. 

Office Phone Main 2829. 

Residence Phone Galvez 107. 

H. E. NELSON, M. D. 

Office: 1221 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Phone Main 242. 

Hours: 2 to 3:30 P. M. 

Residence: 2926 Canal Street, 

Phone Galvez 56: 

GEO. K. PRATT, M. D. 

Suite 1203 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

NEW ORLEANS. 

Hours: 3-5. 

Residence Phone Uptown 3462. 

E. H. WALET, M. D. 

Residence: 1206 Peters Avenue, 

Phone Uptown 1579. 

Office: 621 Macheca Building, 

Phone Main 4596. 

Hours : 12 to 1 P. M. 

SOLON G. WILSON, M. D. 

Suite 1203-1205 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Phone Main 199. 

NEW ORLEANS. 



WALTER E. LEVY, M. D. 

Suite 1232 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours: 4 to 5 P. M. 

Phone Main 2435. 

Residence: 7320 St. Charles Ave., 

Phone Walnut 61. 



CHARLES F. GELBKE, M. D. 

710 MAISON BLANCHE BLDG. 

2:30 to 3:30 P. M. 



GEO. J. TUSSON, M. D. 

1021 BOURBON STREET, 

Phone Hemlock 7. 

Office: 1219 Maison Blanche. 

Hours: 1-2. Phone Main 3231. 



PAUL GELPI, M. D. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO GENITO- 
URINARY AND RECTAL 
DISEASES. 
Suite 802-806 Audubon Building. 
Hours: 130 to 4 P. M., and by 
Appointment. 



E. BLOCK, M. D. 
717 MAISON BLANCHE. 

Hours: 12-1. 

Office Phone Main 2829. 

Residence Phone Walnut 3. 

ALFREDO A. CANTU, M. D. 

MEDICINE AND SURGERY. 

305 Medical Building. 

Hours: 1 to 2. 

Phone Main 4215. 

A. F. HEBERT, M. D. 

Office: 1121 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Phone Main 3377. 

Hours: 12 to 1 P. M. 

J. BROWNE LAROSE, M. D. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

621 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 1 to 4:30. 

R. J. MAINEGRA, JR., M. D. 
Office: 1109 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Plione Main 4747. 

Residence: 2324 Napoleon Avenu€, 

Phone Uptown 112. 

Hours: 12 to 2, and by Appointment. 



139 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



T. J. WALSHE, \L D. 

516 MACHECA BUILDING. 

Office Phone M-ain 430. 

Hours: 2 to 4. 

Residence: 3534 Tulane, 

Phone Galvez 154. 

C. MITCHELL, M. D. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

209 Macheca Building, 

Phone Main 1363. 

LEWIS H. LEVY, M. D. 
Residence: 924 Moss Street, 

Phone Hemlock 1123. 

Office: 1226 Maison Blanche, 

Phone Main 2629. 

Hours: 4:30 to 5:30. 

P. T. TALBOT, M. D. 
Office: 620 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Phone Main 873. 

Residence: 8316 Sycamore Street, 

Phone Walnut 1400. 

Hours: 11 to 12 and 4 to 5. 

J. R. CHISOLM, M. D. 

CUSACHS BUILDING. 

Telephones : 

Office Main 187. 

Residence Uptown 4709. 

HARRY HEIMAN, M. D. 

Residence: 2123 N. Claiborne Ave., 

Phones: Hem. 1634, Jackson 1046-L. 

Office: 711 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 10:30 to 12. 

Phone Main 19. 

GEO. H. UPTON, M. D. 

Residence Phone Jackson 84. 

Office: 711 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 12 to 1. 

Phone Main 19. 



JOSEPH E. BRIERRE, M. D. 

705 MACHECA BLDG. 

Hours : 4-5. 

Residence: 3238 De Soto Street, 

Phone Hemlock 933. 

D. L. WATSON, M. D. 
MEDICINE AND SURGERY. 

Office and Residence: 2424 Camp St. 

Hours: 8 to 9 A. M., 3 to 5 P. M. 

Phone Jackson 213. 

DOM. A. PALMISANO, M. D. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE. 

Residence: 1438 Pine Street, 

Phone Walnut 489. 

Office: 1300 Canal Street. 

Hours: 3 to 4. Phones Main 1790-1791. 



E. L. LECKERT, M. D. 

311-312 MACHECA BUILDING. ' 

Phone Main 3953. 

Residence Phone Jackson 334. 

A. H. GLADDEN, JR., M. D. 
NEW ORLEANS. 

Hours: 3 to 4. 

Phone Main 2015. 

Hours: 3 to 4. Reg. No. 3475. 

Residence: 68 Neron Place. 

J. HERBERT PAGE, M. D. 

734 Maison Blanche Annex, 

Hours: 3-5. 

Telephones: 

Office Main 6801. 

Residence Jackson 631. 

EMILE A. BERTUCCI, M. D. 
INTERNAL DISEASES. 

Office: 1115 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours: 4:30 to 6, and by Appoint- 
ment. Phone Main 3367. 
Residence Phone Jackson 670. 



1-10 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS— NEW ORLEANS, LA. } 

1 


Du. C. C. Bass. Dr. E. Bass. 

DRS. BASS 

Office: 3513 Prytania Street. 

LABORATORY AND SPECIAL 

DIAGNOSIS. 


ALEX. R. CREBBIN, .M. D. j 

OCULIST. } 

1 

1207 Maison Blanche Building. } 

Main 429G. Hours: 1 to 4. j 


W. p. Bradburx, M. D. 

MuiR Beadburx, M. D 

DRS. BRADBURN & BRADBURN 

3.513 PRYTANIA STREET, 

New Orleans. 

Office Hours: 1 to 3:30 P. M. 


JOHN T. CREBBIN, M. D. j 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF j 
THE EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. ♦ 

1 
Office : 1207 Maison Blanche Building. j 

Hours : 1 to 4. Sundays by Appointment. J 
Phone Main 4296. [ 


DR. E.J. BERANGER 

720 MAISON BLANCHE BLDG 
Phone Main 5958. 

Hours: 12—1:30 P. M. and by 
Appointment. 


CHAS. CHASSAIGNAC. M. D. } 

GENITO-URINARY AND RECTAL | 
DISEASES. 1 

Office: 211 Camp Street. | 

Hours: 11 to 1 and 3 to 4: also by | 
Special Appointment. j 


CHARLES J. BLOOM, j\\. D. 

3529 PRYTANIA STREET 

(Opposite Touro Infirmary). 

Uptown 816. Hours: 3 — 5 P. M. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO 

PEDIATRICS. 


J. GEORGE DEMPSEY. M. D. j 

OFFICE: 702 MACHECA BLDG. { 

Phone Main 3454. Hours 12-2. j 

Residence, 942 Jackson Ave. j 

Phone, Jackson 14.54. | 


D. BORNIO, M. D. 

901 NORTH CLAIBORNE AVENUE. 
Hemlock 9292. 
Hours: 12 to 2. 


GEORGE J. de REYNA. M. D. j 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF ♦ 

INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD. ♦ 

Office : 3529 Prytania Street (Opposite ♦ 

Touro Infirmary). ♦ 

Hours : 1 to 2 P. M. Sunday by Appointment. | 

Office: 930 Louisia Street. .♦ 

Hours : 3 to 5 P. M. Phone. Hemlock 149. I 

Res. Phone, Uptown 191. ! 

Office Phone. Uptown 81G. I 


ARTHUR CAIRE, M. D. 

401 MEDICAL BUILDING. 

Main 3220. Hours: 4 to 5:30. 

Residence, 2021 S. Carrollton Avenue. 

Walnut 183. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE. 


HOMER DUPLY. M. D. } 

208 MEDICAL BUILDIXG. | 

Main 1043. Hours: 12 to 5. j 

EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. j 


MEDICAL 

BIOGRAPHIES. 
A U G U S T I N. 


CHARLES S. ESHLE.WAN, M. D. j 

606 MAISON BLANXHE BUILDING, j 

Main 2821. j 

Hours: 1 to 3, and by Appointment. ♦ 

INTERNAL MEDICINE AND j 

DIAGNOSIS. j 



141 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS— NEW ORLEANS, LA. 



AMEDEE GRANGER, M. D. 

RADIOLOGIST. 

1212 Maison Blanche Building, 
New Orleans, La. 

FRANK R. GOMILA, M. D. 

505 Macheca Bldg. Phone, Main 3944. 

Hours: 12 to 1 P. M., and by 

Appointment. 

Residence. 911 St. Ferdinand Street. 

Phone Hemlock 310. 

J. S. HEBERT, M. D, 

1121 MAISON BLANCHE BUILDING. 
Main 3737. Hours: 2—4. 

CHARLES P. HOLDERITH, M.D, 

734 MAISON BLANCHE ANNEX. 

Main Hours : 

SURGERY. 

J. E. ISAACSON, M. D. 

720 MAISON BLANCHE BLDG. 

Hours: 3 to 5, and by Appointment. 

Telephones: 

Office, Main 5958. Res. Uptown 336. 

HAMILTON P. JONES, M. D. 

DIAGNOSTIC CLINIC BUILDING, 

36-01 Prytania Street. 

Uptown 4564. Hours: 2 to 4, and by 

Appointment. 

INTERNAL MEDICINE AND 

DIAGNOSIS. 

E. L. KING, M. D, 

Office: 1201 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Phone Main 2321. 

Residence: 821 Robert Street. 

Phone Uptown 3438. 



J. L. LOCASCIO, M. D. 

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY. 

Office: 720 Maison Blanche Bldg. 
Main 5958. Hours: i to 3. 
Residence Phone Hemlock 176. 
Office Phone, Main 2303. 

Residence Phone, Uptown 2920, 

LOU S V. LOPEZ. M. D. 

Office: 421 Godchaux Building. 
Hours: 11 to 12—3 to 5 P. M. 

PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID 
TO NERVOUS DISEASES. 

SARA TEW MAYO, M. D. 

518 MACHECA BUILDING. 

Main 2848. Hours: 3 to 5:30. 

DISEASES OF WOMEN AND 
CHILDREN. 

ETTA PEARL McCORMICK,M.D. 

519 MACHECA BUILDING. 
Main 2848. Hours: 1 to 3. 

DISEASES OF WOMEN AND 
CHILDREN. 

PAUL McILHENNY, M. D. 

3513 PRYTANIA STREET 

(Opposite Touro Infirmary). 

Uptown 416. Hours: 

OLIVIER L. POTHIER, M. D.' 

214 MEDICAL BUILDING. 
Main 5703. Hours: 3 to 5. 
BACTERIOLOGY AND LABORA- 
TORY DIAGNOSIS. 

F. W. Parham, M. D. 

E. Denegre Martin, M. D. 

DRS. PARHAM & MARTIN 

Office: 3513 Prytania Street. 

Hours: 1 to 3:30 P. M. 



142 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DOCTORS. 



LOUIS J. DUBOS, M. D. 
Residence: 7503 St. Charles Ave., 

Phone Walnut 1107. 

Offices: Suite 1203-1205 Maison 

Blanche Building. 

Hours: 12 to 1:30. Phone Main 199. 

J. C. COLE, M. D. 

Residence Phone Walnut 2720. 

Office Phone Main 2324. 

Office: 1208 Maison Blanche Bldg., 

Hours: 11 to 12:30. 

JULIAN G. HIRSCH, M. D. 

1232 MAISON BLANCHE BLDG., 

Hours: 2:30 to 4 P. M. 

Phone Main 2435. 

Residence: Octavia Apartments, 
Phone Uptown 866. 

LEWIS CASS SPENCER, M. D. 

ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY AND 

X-RAY. 

Office: 1124 Maison Blanche, 

Phone Main 4264. 

Residence: Phone Walnut 566-W. 

Hours 11 to 1. 



EDWARD F. BACON, M. D. 

Residence: 3606 Canal Street, 
Phone Galvez 152. 

Office: 1109 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours 12 to 1:30 P. M. 

Phone Main 4747. 



J. F. POINTS, M. D. 

Residence: 520 S. Solomon Street, 
Phone Galvez 492. 

Office: Maison Blanche Building. 

Office Hours: 12 to 3. 

Phone Main 3102. 



C. GRENES' COLE, M. D. 
GENERAL SURGERY. 

1109 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Hours: 2 to 4. 

Phone Main 4747. 



OTTO LERCH, M. D. 

INTERNIST. 
1231 Maison Blanche Building. 
Phone Main 1464. 
Hours : Mondays. Wednosdays and Fridays, 
9 to 12 : Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- 
urdays, 3 to 6. 

Residence : 1628 Tpperline St. 
Phone Uptown 3737. 



W. H. SEEMANN, M. D. 

505 Macheca Building. 

Hours : 1-2 P. M. and by appointment. 
Telephone M-3944. 

Residence: 4439 DeMontlezun Street. 
Teephone Hemlock 777. 

H. C. LOCHTE, M. D. 

Cusachs Building. 

Hours 2:30 to 3:30. 

Phone Main 6071. 

Residence: 922 S. CarroUton Avenue. 

Phone Wanut 152. 

ETTA P. McCORMICK, M. D. 

Office: 518 Macheca Bldg. 

Hours: 1 to 3. 

Office Phone Main 2848. 

Residence Phone Jackson 439. 



H. VERNON SIMS, M. D. 

1203 Maison Blanche Buiding. 

Hours: 5 to 6. 

Phone Main 199. 



FRANK J. CHALARON, M. D. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO GENITO- 
URINARY DISEASES. 
Hours: 10 A. M. to 1 P. M., and 3 to 
5 P. M. 
120^ M'aison Blanche Bldg. 
Phone Main 3406. 

D. N. SILVERMAN, M. D. 

Office 1222 Maison Banche Bldg. 

Phone Main 1035. 

Residence: 7912 Jeannette Place. 

Phone Walnut 2133. 

Hours : 11 to 12 A. M. 



143 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS— NEW ORLEANS, LA, 



ROBERT A. STRONG, A\. D. 

1222 MAISOX BLANCHE BUILDING. 
Main 1035. Hours by Appointment. 

DISEASES OF INFANCY AND 
CHILDHOOD. 

T. B. Sellers, M. D. C. H. Voss, M. D. 

DRS. SELLERS & VOSS 

CUSACH BUILDING, 

Office Phone Main 

Res. Phone Walnut 1374. 
GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS. 

WM. SCHEPPEGRELL. M. D. 

S4G MAISON BLANCHE ANNEX. 

Main 132. Hours: 11 to 1; 3 to 5. 

EAR. NOSE AND THROAT AND 

HAY FEVER. 

JOHN SMYTH, M D. 

724 BARONNE STREET. 

Main 5GG5. Hours: 3 to 5. 

GENERAL SURGERY. 

J. N. ROUSSEL, M. D. 

720 MACHECA BUILDING. 

Main 3709. Hours: 11-12—1:30 to 3:30. 

DISEASES OF THE SKIN. 

D. H. TREPAGNIER, A\. D. 

Office: HOC Maison Blanche Building. 
Hours: 11 to 12. Phone Main 628. 

Residence; 221C Peniston Street. 
Hours: 7 to 8:30 A. M. 
Phone Uptown 1749-W. 

C. EDWIN VERUIER, M. D. 
UROLOGIST. 
707 Maison Blanche Annex, 
Hours: 1<» to 4. Sunday by Appoint- 
ment. 
Phone, Main 752. 



ISADORE DYER M. D. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES 

OF THE SKIN. 

Hours: 2 to- 4 P. M. 

303 Medical Building, 124 Baronne St. 



CHARLES V. UNSWORTH,M. D. 

212 MEDICAL BUILDING. 
Main 2512. Hourcs: 2-4:30. 

E. S. LEWIS, M. D. 

OFFICE: MEDICAL BUILDING, 

124 Baronne Street. 

Hours: 1 to 4:30 P. M. 

Phone, Main 3443. 

HERMANN B. GESSNER, M. D. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO GENERAL 

SURGERY. 

Office: 1105 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 2:30 to 2 P. M., and by 

Appointment. 

Phone, 1053 Walnut. Phone, 4454 Main. 

MAURICE J. GELPI, M. D. 

CHARITY HOSPITAL, 
New Orleans. 

WHY WORRY? 

Get your Medical Books and 
Journals from 

GEO. AUGUSTIN 

121G MAISON BLANCHE BUILDING, 
New Orleans. Main 5214. 



44 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS— BATON ROUGE, LA. 



W. B. CHAMBERLIN, M. D. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 

MEDICAL DIRECTOR 

BATON ROUGE SANITARIUM. 

DR. J. A. FORTIER 

DENTIST. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 

HENRY A. KING. M. D. 

BATON ROUGE. LA. 



TELEPHONES: 
Office, 186S. Residence, 1102. 

DR. J. A. McCAA 

ROOM 202 ROUMAIN BUILDING, 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 



FOR 

Medical 

Reference 

Work 

SEE 

Augustin 



CLARENCE A. LORIO, M. D. 

507-508 ROUMAIN BUILDING. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 

Phones: Office, 574. Residence, 1807. 

Hours: 10 to 12:30; 3 to 5:30. 

DR. W. S. CUSHMAN 

Roumain Building (Third Floor), 

Room 305. Phone 156. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 

T. C. PAULSEN, M. D. 
I MASONIC TEMPLE, 
BATON ROUGE, LA. 



IF IT'S :^IEDICAL BOOKS, 



SEE 



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PROFESSIONAL CARDS— BATON ROUGE, LA. 



C. A. WEISS, M. D. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

New Reymond Building. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


J. A. CARUTHERS, M. D. 

EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

New Reymond Building. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


X-RAY LABORATORY. 

LESTER J. WILLIAMS, M. D. 

Suite 58-61 Reymond Building. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


DR. H. GUY RICHE 

Reg. No. 2215. 

Office: Reymond Building. 

Phone, 13. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


E. V. WHITAKER, M. D. 

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT. 

51-58 Reymond Building. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


A. A. AYCOCK, D. D. S. 

Roumain Building. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


LOUIS E. BERGERON, M. D. 

Reymond Building. 
BATON ROUGE, LA. 


H. J. BABIN, D. D. S. 

207 New Reymond Building. 

BATON ROUGE, LA. 


J. WEBB McGEE, M. D. 

Roumain Building. 

Phone, 1868. 
\ 
BATON ROUGE, LA. 


TELEPHONES: 
Office, 1156. Residence, 5145. 

DR. E. W. DAY 

DENTIST. 

Office: Third Floor Masonic BIdg. 

• BATON ROUGE, LA. 


E. O.TRAHAN, M. D. 


LATEST BOOKS ON DENTISTRY 



Reymond Building. 
BATON ROUGE, LA. 



BIBLIOGRAPHIES 

Compiled 

AUGUSTIN 



AUGUSTIN 



1216 MAISON BLANCHE. 



Main 5214. 



146 



OF 



NEW ORLEANS 



ARRANGED 



ALPHABETICALLY 



DIRECTORY 



DENTISTS I 



14T 



H. C Davidson 






liiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimn 



Dental Supplies 
Dental Laboratory 



iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiii 



Maison Blanche Building 

New Orleans, La. 



14.^ 



DIRECTORY 

OF 

NEW ORLEANS DENTISTS 



ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY 



EXPLANATION. 

Names in capitals signify membership in the First and Second 
Districts Dental Society of Louisiana. 

The following abbreviations are used for local Medical Colleges: 
'Tulane" signifies "School of Dentistry, Tulane University of 
Louisiana and its predecessor, the New Orleans College of Dentistry." 

"Loyola"' means ''School of Dentistry, Loyola University." 

The names of other colleges are either given in full or abbre- 
viated in such a way as to be easily understood. 



A. 

ADOLPH, CHARLES A.— Demonstrator, Loyola School 
of Dentistry; Associate Member Orleans Parish Medical 
Society. Office 1137 Maison Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 
1468. 

ARROYO, J. J.— Loyola, 1917. Demonstrator of Fos- 
thetic Technics, Loyola. Office, 1137 Maison Blanche 
Building; 9-12, 1-5; Main 1468. Residence, 2807 Lepage 
Street; Hemlock 1631. Exodontia and Conductive Anes- 
thesia. 

B. 

Bacigalupi, Anthony — Tulane, 1914. Office, Canal-Com- 
mercial Bank Building, Decatur and St. Philip Streets ; 9-5 ; 
Hemlock 479. Residence, 829 St. Claude. 

Bayon, J. Charles — Loyola, 1919. Assistant Demonstra- 
tor, Loyola. Office, 1235 Maison Blanche Building; Main 
1045. Residence, 821 St Claude Street; Hemlock 24601W. 
General Practice. 9:30-4. 



140 



BAYON, J. PAUL— Baltimore College of Dental Sur- 
gery, 1890. Office, 1235 Maison Blanche Building; 9:30- 
4:30; Main 1045. Residence, 821 St. Claude Street; Hem- 
lock 2064-W. General Practice. 

Bechet, L. V.— 1240 St. Bernard ; Hemlock 2232. 

Belden, H. E.— 608 Canal; Main 3568. 

BERTUCCI, J. F.— Tulane, 1918. Office, 703 Macheca 
Building; 9-5; Main 2916. Residence, 1500 Magazine; 
Jackson, 9154. Assistant Demonstrator, Tulane. 

BLAND, A. B. — 1532 Washington Avenue; Jackson 372. 

BLAND, LUCIAN— Professor Oral Pathology and The- 
rapeutics, Loyola. Office, Maison Blanche Building. 

BLOCH, E. E.— Office, 1111 Maison Blanche Building; 
Main 1547. 

Bolian, George C. — Tulane, 1912. Consultant to U. S. 
Marine Hospital, Henry Clay Avenue and Tchoupitoulas 
Street. Office and residence, 911 Henry Clay Avenue; 
9-5; Uptown 2643. 

BOWMAN, H. L.— Office, 1108 Maison Blanche Build- 
ing; Main 3371. 

Bowman, A. G. — Office, Hennen Building ; Main 2554. 

BROUSSARD, L. F.— 1539 Jackson Avenue. 

BROWN, A. K.— 2514 Milan Street; Uptown 3161. 

BUISSON, JULES ALCEE— Tulane, 1907. Office, 520 
Godchaux Building; 9-5; Main 3868. Residence, 3430 Mag- 
azine Street. Dental Radiology and General Practice. 

C. 

CAPO, J. T.— Office, Maison Blanche Building; Main 
3449. 

Carey, T. W.— 106 S. Rampart Street; Main 3244. 

CAREY, M. O. — Bermuda and Pelican Avenue. 

Carter, J. Francis — Suite 417-418 Macheca Bldg.; 8-12; 
1-5; Maiji 375. Radiology and Diagnosis. Practice limited 
to Mouth, Teeth and Jaws. 

CHAPMAN, W. R.— Office. 309 Medical Building. 

CHERAULT, L. D.— 2334 Ursuline Street. 

CHENET, JAMES ELMORE— Tulane, 1915. Office, 
3333 Magazine Street, near Louisiana Avenue; 9-5; Uptown 



350 



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New Orleans, La. 
Price List Sent on Request 



The Journal of 
Pathology and Bacteriology 

The Official Journal of the Pathological 
Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 

Edited by 
GERMAN SIMS WOODHEAD, M.A., M.D. 

Jissisted by 
JAMES RICHIE, M.A., M.D., and A. E. BOYCOTT. M.A., M. D. 

The Journal is Published Quarterly. 
Subscription Price, $6.00 — T^ayable in Jldvance. 



Send Subscriptions to ylugustin ^ook Jlgency, 1216 ^M^aison Blanche ^Idg., 
^ew Orleans, La. "Phone Main 5214. 



2910. Residence, 3507 Magazine Street; Uptown 3334. ♦ 

General Practice. j 

COHN, ALFRED JAMES— Baltimore College of Dental I 

Surgery, 1899. Office, Suite 26-25 Cusachs Building; | 

9-12, 1-4; Main 1513. Residence, 332 Millaudon Street; j 

Walnut 1644. General Practice. j 

COLLEY, EUGENE F.— Atlanta Dental College. 1896. I 

Office, 601 Godchaux Building; Main 4240. Residence, j 

2328 Napoleon Avenue; Uptown 2505 | 

COLOMB, J. J.— Office, 827 Maison Blanche Annex; I 

Main 3160. { 

Cooper, W. H. — Office, Maison Blanche Building; Main { 

1505. I 

CROZAT, GEORGE B.— Office, 1224 Maison Blanche | 



Building. 



I 

i 

DANSEREAU, A. P.— Office, Macheca Building; Main j 

4754. I 

DEAN, S.— Office, 1116 Maison Blanche Building. j 

DEMPSEY, LEO C— New Orleans College of Dentis- } 

try, 1905. Office and residence, 943 Jackson Avenue; { 

hours by appointment; Jackson 1639. j 

DEVERGES, PAUL— Office, 820 Maison Blanche Build- ! 

mg. I 

DUBUISSON, GEORGE W.— Office, 602 Macheca Build- j 

ing. I 

DUCASSE, A. LOUIS— Tulane. Office, Suite 732-735 { 

Maison Blanche Building ; 9-5 ; Main 3526. Associate Mem- { 

ber Orleans Parish Medical Society. * 

DUCASSE, EDWARD BERNARD— Tulane, 1910. Pres- 
ident First and Second Districts Dental Society of Louisi- 
ana. Office, 732-735 Maison Blanche Building ; 9-5 ; Main 4 
3526. Associate Member Orleans Parish Medical Society. | 
Residence, 2711 Ursuline Street; Hemlock 2313. i 

Duke, St. Clair — New Orleans College of Dentistry. Of- 
fice, 1229 Maison Blanche Building; 9-4; Main 3855. Resi- 
dence, 4123 South Franklin Street. 



E. 

EASTIN, E. J.— Office, 1108 Maison Blanche Building. 

Eckhardt, Charles — Baltimore College of Dental Sur- 
gery. 1879. Office, 840 Maison Blanche Annex (formerly 
Audubon Building) ; 11-5. Residence, Metairie Ridge; 
Walnut 2702. Practice limited to Operative Dentistry 
and Prosdthodontia. 

EHLERT, WILLIAM— Office, 1503 Carondelet Street; 
Jackson 1090. 

EISENMANN, NATHAN— Dental Department Atlanta 
College of Physicians and Surgeons. Office, 1129 Maison 
Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 2361. Residence. 1910 Peters 
Avenue. General Practice. 

Fassy, M. B.— Office, 518 Macheca Building. ' 

F. 

FAULK, J. S. — Office, 808 Maison Blanche Annex; Main 
899. 

FORET, A. J.— Philadelphia Dental College, 1894. Pro- 
fessor of Exodontia, Loyola School of Dentistry. Office, 
409-410 Medical Building; 9:30-12, 1-5; Main 29. Resi- 
dence, 2328 St. Charles Avenue; Jackson 1591-W. 

FORTIER, EUGENE L.— Tulane, 1908. Professor of 
Prosthetic Dentistry, Tulane. Office, 714 Maison Blanche 
Annex; 9-5; Main 2158. Residence, 5008 Magazine Street; 
Uptown 1539. 

FRIELER, J. F.— Office and residence, 3508 Magazine 
Street; Uptown 2056. 

FRIEDRICHS, ANDREW G.— Office, 825 Maison 
Blanche Building; Main 2249. 

G. 

GAMARD. EDW^ARD A.— University of Maryland, Den- 
tal Department, 1889. Secretary and Professor of Opera- 
tive Dentistry, Loyola. Office, 1131 Maison Blanche Build- 
ing; Main 144.2 Residence, 2941 Palmyra; Galvez 804-W. 

GARCIA, J. M.— Office, 1221 Maison Blanche Building; 
Main 242. 

GASTON, ROBERT W.— Louisville College of Dentis- 
try, 1901. Office, 1132 Maison Blanche Building; 9:30-5; 






ir>4 



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Main 2646. Residence, 1961 Caihoun Street; Uptown j 

4664-W. Practice limited to Orthodontia. Associate Mem- 
ber Orleans Parish Medical Society. 



♦ 

GIBBONS. CHARLES NAVAL — Office, Maison j 

Blanche Building ; Main 277. j 

GIBBONS, J. T.— Office, 836 Maison Blanche Annex; j 

Main 2737. j 

GORE, B. L.— Tulane, 1908. Professor of Dental Sur- I 

gery, Tulane. Office, 715 Maison Blanche Annex; 9-5; j 

Main 2158. Residence, 2805 Robert Street. j 

GORMAN, JACOB ALLEN— Columbia University, 1898. j 

Adjunct Professor of Dental and Oral Surgery, Loyola. j 

Professor of Orthodontia, Loyola School of Dentistry. Of- j 

fice, 629 Maison Blanche Building; 9-12, 1-5; Main 2077. j 

Residence, 1415 Octavia Street, Uptown 2435-W. j 

Grau, F. R. — 606 Commercial Place; Main 3437. 

GROSJEAN, S. S.— Associate Member Orleans Parish 
Medical Society. Office, Macheca Building. 

GUENO. NORMAN P.— Assistant Demonstrator. Loyola 
School of Dentistry. Office, Maison Blanche Building; 
Main 1244. 

GUTHRIE. HAIDEE WEEKS— Northwestern Univefrsi- 
ty. Office, 1206 Maison Blanche Building; hours by ap- 
pointment; Main 2324. Residence, 1628 State Street; Wal- 
nut 230. 

H. 

HAVA, WALTER C— 1527 Sixth Street. 
Harvey, 'J. B. — Office, Maison Blanche Annex; Main 
5322, 

Hullinghorst, George J.— Tulane, 1907. Office, 1128 
Maison Blanche; 10-4; Phones Main 4714 and Main 2383. 
Residence, 1228 Arabela; Uptown 2987. Practice limited 
to Crown Bridge and Prosthesis. 

HE ALE Y, WELLS— Office. 3200 Magazine Street; Up- 
town 2898. 

HOWARD, M. JANE— Loyola, 1918. Office, 424 God- 
chaux Building; hours by appointment only; Main 2303. 
Residence, 1907 Palmyra; Galvez 9210. Prophylaxis and 
Periodontia. 



15- 



HOUCK, L. D. R.— 5351 Chestnut Street. 

Hull, J. S. — Office, Maison Blanche Annex; Main 999. 

I. 

INDEST, GEORGE F.— Tulane, 1906. Office, 827 Mai- • 
son Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 2249. Residence, 2435 
Esplanade; Hemlock 388. 

Irion, V. K. — Office, 735 Maison Blanche Building; Main 
3449. 

ISAACSON, FELIX M.— Tulane, 1917. Office, 1120 
Maison Blanche Building; 9-5 ; Main 4033. Residence, 3512 
Magazine Street; Uptown 336. 

J. 

Jean, G. — Macheca Building. 

Jensen, Harold — Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1892. 
Office, 316 Macheca Building; 8-5; Main 1078. ^ 
JOLLY, A. MAYNARD— 6120 Chestnut Street. 
Jones, McGregor J. — Maison Blanche Annex. 

K. 

KELLEHER, CHARLES P.— Ohio College of Dental 
Surgery, 1907. Professor of Oral Surgery and Exodontia, 
Loyola. Office, Suite 610-611 Macheca Building; 9-5; Main 
639. Residence, 7927 Oak Street; Uptown 221. Associate 
Member Orleans Parish Medical Society. 

KELLER, F. A.— Tulane, 1904. Office, 31 Cusachs 
Building; 9-5; Main 1093. Rseidence, 2324 Octavia Street; 
Walnut 1479-W. 

KELLS, C. EDMUND— New York College of Dentistry, 
1878. Office, 1237 Maison Blanche Building; 8-5; Main 
418. Residence, 429 Walnut Street; Walnut 817-W. Prac- 
tice limited to Oral Hygiene and Minor Oral Surgery. 

KNAPP, J. ROLLO— * 

Knapp, Sayre B. — Board of State Dental Examiners, 
1889. Office and residence, 324 South Rampart ; 8-6 ; Main 
3042. 

L. 

LANDRY, J. HAMILTON— Professor of Crown and 
Bridge Work, Loyola School of Dentistry; Associate Mem- 

158 



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Rt. Hon. Christopher Addison, M. D., M. P. C. -T. Bond. C. M. O.. P. R. C. S. 

Professor Wm. BrLLOCK, M. D. Professor Geo. Murray, M. D. ♦ 

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Departmental Directors — Bacteriology, Sir Almouth Wright ; Applied Physiology, | 

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ical aspects and the new methods of treatment of Neureses as well as more theoretical 
papers on Hysteria and other functional disorders. Issued bi-monthly, $10.50 per year. 

AUGUSTIN BOOK AGENCY, NEW ORLEANS, LA. j 



159 



SOUTHERN-CRESCENT 
DENTAL CO. 

F. J. HUMBRECHT, Manager 

DENTAL LABORATORY 
Service -- Ef f icieny -- Fairness 

302 Macheca Bldg. New Orleans 

1820 — A Century of Continuous Publication--! 920 



THE 

AMERICAN JOURNAL 



^OF THE- 



MEDICAL SCIENCES 

GEORGE MORRIS PIERSOL. M. D. JOHN H. MUSSER, JR.. M. D. 

Editor Associate Editor 



A Clean, Dignified, Authoritative Journal $5.00 per Annum 



LEA & FEBIGER 

PUBLISHERS 
706-7 1 Sansom St. Philadelphia, Pa. 



Subscriptions Received by the Augustin Book Agency 
New Orleans, La. 



IGO 



1 



ber Orleans' Parish Medical Society. Office, 709 Macheca { 

Building; 9-12, 1-5. I 

LESCALE, J. B.~Tulane, 1918. Office, 209 Macheca 
Building; 9-5. Residence, 3801 Canal Street; Galvez 1142. 

Levert, W. F. — Office, Maison Blanche Annex; Main 
5194. 

LEEFE, ALFRED ARCHINARD— Tulane, 1910. Pro- 
fessor of Dental Pathology and Therapeutics ; Professor of 
Oral Hygiene and Special Pathology; Chief of Dental In- 
firmary and Secretary of Faculty, Tulane. Office and resi- 
dence, 2131 Baronne Street; 8-12; Jackson 1411-W. { 

LOEFFEL, OSCAR L. — Demonstrator of Clinical Demtis- j 

try, Loyola; Associate Member Orleans Parish Medical So- | 

ciety. Office, 1129 Maison Blanche Building; Main 3449. | 

Residence, 1311 St. Charles Avenue; Jackson 1003. { 

M. { 

MAGNER, E. S.— 907 North Claiborne Street; Hemlock | 

2372. j 

MAGRUDER, A. L.— 1105 Maison Blanche; Main 4454. | 

Mansberg, Mitchell— Tulane, 1903. Office, 518 S. Ram- I 

part Street; 9-12, 1:30-5; Main 3911. Residence, 8225 Pa- | 

nola Street; Walnut 917. | 

Matranga, Joseph — Cusachs Building. | 

MATTHEWS, BENJAMIN— Special Instructor in Exo- I 

dontia, Loyola. Address, Loyola University. 

MEETZE, EARL D.— Tulane, 1919. Office, 1129-1130 
Maison Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 4714. Residence, 518 
Burdette Street; Walnut 2424-W. 

MERMILLIOD, JR., CHARLES— Atlanta Dental Col- 
lege, 1892. Office, 306 Mecheca Building; 8-4; Main 1078, 
Practice limited to Extractions and X-Rays. 

MEYER, HERBERT H.— Office, 1137 Maison Blanche 
Building. 

MEYNIER, A. C. B. — Association Member Orleans Par- 
ish Medical Society. Office, 835 Maison Blanche. 

MILLER, W. MILTON— Tulane. 1902. Office, 627 Mai- 
son Blanche Building; 9-12, 1-5; Main 43. Rehidence, 8134 
Panola Street ; Walnut ^190. General Dental Practice. 



161 



♦ 

MIRE, GEORGE JEAN— Tulane, 1902. Office, 1341 

j Elysian Fields, corner Villere; 9-6; Hemlock 9448. Resi- 

{ dence, 1781 North Broad Avenue. General Practice. 

I MOORE, H. M.— Office, 515 Medical Building; Main 

♦ 3175. Associate ember Orleans Parish Medical Society. 

I MOORE, J, R.— Office, 515 Medical Building. 

I MC. 

I McAFEE, SAMUEL H.— Tulane, 1898. Office, 1235 

I Maison Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 4770. Residence, 1864 

♦ Soniat Street. 

I McClure, F. W.— Tulane, 1916. Office, 5465 Dauphine 

I Street; 9-5; Hemlock 9442. Residence, 6101 Dauphine 
Street. 



♦ McKENZIE, W. A. — Assistant Demonstrator, Loyola 



School of Dentistry. 



! 

J NOLAN, H. M.— 218 Olivier; Algiers 289L. 

I Norton, Edward Lee — Western Reserve University, 18'99. 

j Office, 734 Maison Blanche Annex; 9-4; Main 389. Resi- 

dence. 1036 Nahhville Avenue ; Uptown 2299-J. 

0. 

OSER, FRANK S.— Tulane, ^912. Office, 704 Maison 
Blanche Annex; 9-5; Main 4451. Residence, 2827 South 
Carrollton Avenue ; Walnut 414-W. General Practice. 

OSER, WALTER— Office, Maison Blanche Building; 
Main 43. 

Perkins, W. J. — Cusachs Building. 

P. 

Pfisterer, L. M. — Office, Maison Blanche Annex; Main 
1481. 

PORTER, A. E.— Demonstrator of Clinical Dentistry, 
Loyola. Office, 927 Maison Blanche Building. 

Price, Hazel G. — Tulane, 1916. Visiting Dentist, New 
Orleans Dispensary for Women and Children. Office, 1233 
Maison Blanche Building; 9-fe ; Main 4933. Residence, 3532 
Cleveland Avenue; Galvez 1G^37-J. 

i 

♦ ^ 

162 



Phone Main 5390 



Audubon Dental Supply 

Company 

The Independent Dental Depot 



Audubon Building 
New Orleans, La. 



L. S. Augustin 

345 Carondelet Street 

NEW ORLEANS, LA. 

Specialist m Gregg Shorthand, Practical Book-Keeping, 
Touch Typewriting, Civil Service Coaching, (Whites) 

A. B. Griswold & Co., Ltd, 

Established 1817 



Jewelers and Silversmiths 
and Optical Department 

WHERE WORK IS DONE 
WITH DISPATCH 



728 Canal Street New Orleans, La, 



IGo 



HARPER'S 



FOR 1920 



The readers of Hauper's Magazine during 
the coming year will be treated to an edi- 
torial program which in excellence and vari- 
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tempted by that publication. The following 
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plans for 1920, may be regarded as a prom- 
ise of many equally good things to come, 
which we have not the space to mention 
here : 

A tievo Bcfies of Detective Stories, 

By O. K. Chesterton. 
Adventuring in the South Seas, 

By James Norinan Hall. 
Why We Like What We Like, 

by Henry Van Dyke. 
A NotaJ)le Serial, 

hy William Allen White. 
What Europe Wants, ty Arthur Bullard. 
Paths of Glory, by Harold A. Littledale. 
Dramatic Scenes in Congress, 

by Hon. Joseph G. Cannon. 
Short Stories of Distinction. 

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164 



♦ 

PROVOSTY, G. M.— Office 1119 Maison Blanche Build- j 

ing; Main 3013. ' j 

PROWELL, DAVID M.— 2728 General Pershing Street. j 

PSAYLA, J. E. — Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry and i 

Dental Anatomy, Loyola. Office, 703-704 Macheca Build- j 

ing; 9-5; Main 2916. Residence, 2020 Carrollton Avenue; j 

Main 2916. | 

! 

RAULT, C. v.— Office, 709 Macheca Building. j 

Ramelli, E. H. — Professor of Orthodontia and Dental Ra- 
diography, Loyola. Office, 208 Strand Building ; 9-5 ; Main 
5966. Residence, 7719 Hampson; Walnut 1654-L. 

Roeling, William — Tulane, 102. Office, Dauphine and 
Mazant Streets; 9-5; Hemlock 1590. , 

RICHARDSON, W. 0.— Office, Maison Blanche Building. 

ROSADO, G. 0. — Demonstrator of Clinical Dentistry, 
Loyola. 7004 St. Charles Avenue. 

Root, Richard C— Tulane. i903. Office, Magazine and 
General Pershing Streets; 11-5:30; Uptown 4381. Resi- 
dence, 1508 Canal Street; Main 5832. 

ROZMUSZ, ANTON A.— Board of Dental Examiners, 
1894. Office, 3040 Esplanade Avenue; 9-12, 1-4. 
RUBENSTEIN, R.— 1705 Baronne Street. 
RUSS, A. B.— Office, Maison Blanche Building. 



SALOMON, OSCAR E. M.— Wuzburg, Berlin, 1863; Bal- 
timore, 1870. Office and residence, 1514 Canal Street; 
8-10,11-4; Main 5594. Practice limited to Oral Surgery 
and Dentistry. 

SALATICH, R. J.— Office, 1040 North Rampart Street. 
Sanderh, R. O.— 2602 Howard Street; Jackson 1268. 
SANDOZ, G. E.— Office, 208 Strand Building; Main 
5966. 

SARRAZIN, JULES J.— Baltimore College of Dental 
Surgefry, 1887. Office, Suite 422-424 Godchaux Building; 



165 



hours bj^ appointment; Main 2303. Practice limited to Pe- 
riodontia and Stomatology. 

Sherwood, R. E. — Macheca Building. 

SCHAEFER, P.— Office, Cusachs Building; Main 3249. 

SCHMIDT, B. A.— Office, 1225 Maison Blanche Building. 

SCHROEDER, R. L.— Office, 4621 Prytania Street; Up- 
town 3250. 

Shoemaker, C. T. — Atlanta College of Dental Surgery, 
1915. Office, 1017 Canal Street; 9-6; Main 5908. Resi- 
dence, 3703 South Franklin Street; Uptown 3709-A. 

Sierra, H.— 633 North Rampart; 9-5. 

Skinner, E. J.— Tulane, 1911. Office, 838 Maison 
Blanche Annex ; 9-4 ; Exodontia and Dental Radiology. 

Smith, G. C— 3324 St Crarles Street; Uptown 2457. , 

STUMPF. L. J.— Office, 1110 Maison Blanche Building. 

Sumner, C. F.— 1039 Canal Street; Main 2543. 

SWORDS, C. W.— Office, 1126 Maison Blanche Building. 

T. 

TERRY, T. M.— Office 523 Godchaux Building. 

TILLY, HENRY LOUIS— Loyola, 1919. Office, 520 
Godchaux Building; 9-5; Main 3868. Residence, 2625 Ur- 
suline Avenue; Hemlock 63. General Practice and Dental 
Radiology. 

TRANCHINA, A. C— Loyola, 1917. Office, 1108 Maison 
Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 1371. Residence, 1628 St. 
Charles Avenue ; Jackson 786. 

TRAPPEY, 0. J.— 1910 Marengo Street ;Uptown 2787. 

TUCKER, W. SAMUEL— Office, 523 Godchaux Building. 

TUCKER, CHARLES S.— Adjunct Professor of Dental 
and Oral Surgery, Loyola; Professor of Oral Therapeutics 
and Pathology, Loyola School of Dentistry. Office, Maison 
Blanche Building. 

V. 

Valentino, J. F.— 708 N. Claiborne Street; Hemlock 1260. 
VARNADO, M. B.— Office, 1237 Maison Blanche Build- 
ing; Main 6140. 

VIGNES, C. VICTOR— Louisville College of Dentistry, 



166 



1892; A. M., Dean and Professor of Clinical Dentistry and 
Histology. Loyola School of Dentistry; Associate Member 
Orleans Parish Medical Society. Office, 709 Macheca 
Building; Main 2862. Residence, 1832 General Pershing 
Street. 

W. 

WAHL, JOSEPH P.— Tulane, 1902. Professof Dental 
and Oral Surgery, Loyola; Chief of Dental Staff, Charity 
Hospital; Professor of Dental Technic and Fractures of 
Caxilael an'd Mandibles, Loyola School of Dentistry; Asso- 
ciate Member Orleans Parish Medical Society. Office, 
1135 Maison Blanche Building; 9-5; Main 3216. Residence, 
236 Audubon Boulevard; Walnut il96-W. Practice limited 
to Dental Radiology, Diagnosis, Exodontia and Minor Oral 
Surgery. 

Walker, W. H. — Office, Maison Blanche Building; Main 
3855. 

WEBER, CARL H.— Tulane, 1902. Office, 210 Macheca 
Building; 9-6; Main 601. Residence, 1801 Magazine Street. 

WEBRE, J. LANIS— Office. 513 Macheca Building; Main 
2849. 

Weiss, G. N. — 841 Exposition Boulevard; Uptown 989. 

WELSH, R. H.— Office, Godchaux Building; Main 2600. 

WILEY, J I H.— Office, Interstate Building; Main 779. 

WILLIS, W. A.— 1815 Dryades Street; Jackson 184. 

WILSON, THTODORE— Tulane, 1916. Demonstrator 
Clinical Operative Dentistry, Tulane. Office and resi- 
dence, 835 Fern Street; 9-5; Walnut 2415. General Prac- 
tice. Dental Examiner Bureau Clinic, Eagle and Poplar 
Streets. 

Wingrave, T. J. — 1908 Burgundy Street; Hemlock 490. 

Wint, A. 0. — Howard University. Office, 1832 Dryades ; 
8-6 ; Jackson 0191. Residence 2710 Valence Street. 

WOLFE, FREDERICK J.— Tulane, 1908. Office, 609 
Macheca Building; 9-5 ; Main 3075. Residence, 2231 Maga- 
zine Street; Jackson 831. 

WOLFE, OSCAR A.— Office, Macheca Building; Main 
3075. 



167 



WOOD, WALLACE, JR.— Dean, School of Dentistry, 
Tulane. Office, Macheca Building; Main 4472. 

WOODWARD, JOHN E.— Office, Macheca Building; 
Main 3269. 

WOODWARD, JOSEPH M.— Office, Maison Blanche 
Building; Main 277. 

Z. 

ZEIDLER, JOHN CRIMEN— Atlanta Dental College, 
1909; A. B. Instructor in Oral Surgery and Anesthesia. 
Tulane ; Secretary First and Second Districts Dental Society 
of Lousiana; Visiting Dentst, Charity Hospital. Office, 
Suite 1128-1130 Maison Blanche Building; Main 4714 and 
Main 2383. Residence, 2816 Ursuline Avenue; Hemlock 
2544. Practice limited to Exodontia, Minor and Oral Sur- 
gery and Anesthesia. 



Its 



I 
I 

DIRECTORY ! 



OF 



NEW ORLEANS 



DENTISTS I 



SPECIALISTS 



The Liverpool& London &Globe Insurance Co.,Ltd. 



"AS A LOUISIANA INSTITUTION" 



IT 



Has selected New Orleans as one of its four Departments for the 
management of its American Business. 

Maintains a Local Board of Managers, comprising four of New Or- 
leans' Representative Merchants. 

Employs at its New Orleans Office 115 persons, consisting of Man- 
agers and Clerks. 

;Has invested in New Orleans Real Estate 3 office buildings at a cost 
of $366,000.00. 

Pays annually taxes to New Orleans and State of Louisiana on Real 
Estate $8,842.00. 

Pays taxes on its business operations City of New Orleans and State 
of Louisiana, $9,881.00. 

Deposits its funds in four of New Orleans' Banks, from which Losses 
throughout the South are paid. 

Purchases all stationery and supplies necessary to its Southern Busi- 
ness from New Orleans Merchants and Dealers. 

These facts exhibit how this Company has been identified with 
Louisiana, which should favorably commend it to the consideration of 
Louisiana Insurers. 



DO IT NOW 



w 



JUST 



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Whistle Bottling Company 

1815 Canal St. Phone Main 4218 

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA 



i.o 



PRACTITIONERS IN SPECIAL BRANCHES OF 
DENTISTRY. 

CLINICAL DENTISTRY. 

Loeffel, 0. L.— 1129 Maison Blanche; Main 3449. 
Porter, A. E. — 927 Maison Blanche. 
Rosado, G. 0.— 7004 St Charles Avenue. 
Vignes, C. V.— 709 Macheca Bldg.; Main 2862. 
Wilson, T.— 835 Fern; 9-5; Walnut 2415. 

CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK. 
Landry, J. H.— 709 Macheca Bldg. ; 9-12, 1-5. 

EXODONTIA. 
Foret, A. J.— 409-410 Medical Bldg.; 9:30-12, 1-5; Main 29. 
Kelleher, C. P.— Suite 610-611 Macheca Bldg.; 9-5; Main 

639. 
Matthews, B. — Loyola University. 
Skinner, E. J. — 839 Maison Blanche Annex. 
Wahl, J. P.— 1135 Maison Blanche; 9-5; Main 3216. 

OPERATIVE DENTISTRY. 
Eckhardt, C. — 840 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-5. 
Gamard, E. A.— 1131 Maison Blanche; Main 1442. 

EXTRACTIONS AND X-RAY. 
Mermilliod, Jr., C— Macheca Bldg.; 8-4; Main 1078. 
Tilly, H. L.— 520 Godchaux Bldg. ; 9-5 ; Main 3868. 

EXODONTIA AND CONDUCTIVE ANESTHESIA. 

Arroyo, J. J — 1137 Maison Blanche; 9-12, 1-5; Main 1468. 
Zeidler, J. C— 1128-1130 Maison Blanche; Main 4714, Main 
2383. 

ORAL PATHOLOGY AND THEURAPEUTICS. 

Bland, L. — Maison Blanche. 

Tucker, C. S. — Maison Blanche. I 



171 



ORAL HYGIENE. 
Kells, C. E.— 1237 Maison Blanche; 8-5; Main 418. 
Leefe, A. A.— 2131 Baronne; 8-12; Jackson 1411-W. 

ORAL SURGERY. 
Kelleher, C. P.— Suite 610-611 Macheca Bldg.; 9-5; Main 

639. 
Kells, C. E.— 1237 Maison Blanche; 8-5; Main 418. 
Salomon, 0.— 1514 Canal Street; 8-10; Main 5594. 
Shoemaker, C. T.— 1017 Canal; Main 5908. 
Tucker, C. S. — Maison Blanche. 
Wahl, J. P.— 1135 Maison Blanche; 9-5; Main 3216. 
Zeidler, J. C— 1128-1130 Maison Blanche; Main 4714, 

Main 2883. 

ORTHODONTIA. 

Crozat, G. B.— 1224 Maison Blanche. 
Gaston, R. W.— 1132 Maison Blanche; 9:30-5; Main 2646. 
Gorman, J. A.— 629 Maison Blanche ; 9-12, 1-5 ; Main 2077. 
Ramelli, E. H.— 208 Strand Bldg. ; 9-5 ; Main 5966. 

PERIODONTIA AND STOMATOLOGY. 

Sarrazin, J. J — Suite 422-424 Godchaux Bldg. ; by appoint- 
ment; Main 2303. 

PROPHYLAXIS AND PERIODONTIA. 

Howard, M. Jane — 424 Godchaux Bldg.; by appointment 
only ; Main 2303. 

RADIOLOGY. 
Buisson, J. A.— 520 Godchaux Bldg. ; 9-5 ; Main 3868. 
Ramelli, E. H.— 208 Strand Bldg.; 9-5; Main 5966. 
Skinner, E. J. — 839 Maison Blanche Annex. 
Tilly, H. L.— 520 Godchaux Bldg. ; 9-5 ; Main 3868. 
Wahl, J. P.— 1135 Maison Blanche; 9-5; Main 3216. 

PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY. 

Fortier, E. L. — 714 Maison Blanche; 9-5; Main 2158. 
Hullinghorst, G. J.— 1128 Maison Blanche; 10-4; Main 4714, 
Main 2383. 
Psayla, J. E.— 703-704 Macheca Bldg. ; 9-5 ; Main 2916. 

SURGERY AND PROTHODONTHIA. 

Eckert, Charles — 840 Maison Blanche Annex; 11-5. 
Gore, B. L. — 715 Maison Blanche Annex; 9-5; Main 2158. 
Gorman, J. A.— 629 Maison Blanche; 9-12, 1-5; Main 2077. 



172 



DIRECTORY 



OF 



NEW ORLEANS 



DENTISTS 



ARRANGED 



BY BUILDINGS 



I We Lend — 

I Medical Books, Medical 
Journals, Works of Reference 

For the Nominal Sum of 

Twenty -Five Cents Per Week 

WHY WORRY? 
Just Ring Up Augustin 

j and our efficient service is at your disposal 

j 

j Yearly Fee .---.--. $10.00 

♦ This includes the privilege of the use of our Reading Room, 1115 
f Louisiana Avenue, during the hours allotted for such a purpose 



Medical Bibliographies 

Complied at Reasonable Rates 

A ugustin Library of Medical Research 

1216 Maison Blanche Building New Orleans, La. 



174 ._ 



♦ 
♦ 

NEW ORLEANS DENTISTS. I 

Arranged by Office buildings. | 

» 



CUSACHS BUILDING. 

Canal and Dauphine Streets. 



Suite 25.— Phone Main 1513. 
Cohn, A. J. 9-12 ; 1-4 General Practice. } 

Suie 26.— Phone Main 3249. | 

Schaeffer, P. 9-4 General Practice. } 

Suite 27.— Phone Main 1288. { 

Perkins, W. J. , 9-6 General Practice. ♦ 

Suite 31.— Phone Main 1093. I 

Keller, F. A. 9-5 General Practice. j 

♦ 
I 

GODCHAUX BUILDNG. I 

Canal and Chartres Streets. | 

♦ 

Suite 420.— Phone Main 2303. { 

Howard, M. Jane. By Appointment. Prophylaxis and { 

Peridontia. { 

Sarrazin, J. J. By Appointment. Periodontia and | 

Stomatology. { 

Suite 601.— Phone Main 4240. \ 

Colley, E. C. 9-5 General Practice. f 

MACHECA BUILDING. | 

830 Canal St \ 

♦ 

306 Mermillod, Charles 8-4 Extraction and I 

Main 1078 X-Ray. j 

306 Jensen, H. L. 8-5 General Practice. j 

Main 1078 I 

♦ 
♦ 



175 



416 Wood, Wallace, Jr. 9-5 

Main 416 

417 Carter, J. F. 9-5 

Main 375 
515 Webre, J. L. 9-5 

Main 6849 



General Practice. 

Radiology and 

Diagnosis. 
General Practice. 



Suite 518— Telephone Main 2848. 
518 Fassy, M B. 9-5 General Practice. 



Suite 602— Telephone Main 3269. 
602 Woodward, John E. 9-5 General Practice. 

602 Dubuisson, G. W. 9-5 General Practice. 



Suite 609— Telephone Main 3075. 
609 Wolfe, 0. A. 9-5 General Practice. 

609 Wolfe, F. J. 9-5 General Practice. 

609 Sherwood, R. E. 9-5 General Practice. 



Suite 611— Telephone Main 639. 
611 Kelleher, Charles P. 9-5 General Practice. 





703 


Psayla, J. E. 9-5 

Main 2916 


General Practice. * 






703 


Bertucci, J. L. 9-5 

Main 2916 


General Practice. 






709 


Vignes, C. V. 9-5 

Main 2862 


General Practice. 






709 


Landry, J. H. 9-5 

Main 2862 


General Practice. 






709 


Jean, G. 9-5 


General Practice. 








Main 2862 







176 





MAISON BLANCHE BUILDING. 




Canal and Dauphine. 




627 


Miller, M. W. 9-12; 1-5 


General Practice. 1 




Main 43 




• 627 


Oser, W. 9-12; 1-5 


General Practice. 




Main 43 




629 


Gorman, J. A. 9-5 


Orthodontia and | 




Man 2077 


Dental X-Ray. 


725 


Irion, V. K. 9-5 


General Practice. 




Main 3449 




727 


Loeffel, 0. L. 9-5 


General Practice. 




Main 3449 




727 


Capo, J. T. 9-5 
Main 3449 


General Practice. 


729 


Tuller, C. S. 9-5 
Main 154 


General Practice. j 



735 


Ducasse, A. L. 9-5 
Main 3526 


General Practice. 


735 


Ducasse, E. B. 9-5 


General Practice. j 




Main 3526 


1 


735 


Meynier, A. C. 9-5 


General Practice. 




Main 3526 


■ 


827 


Friedrichs, A. G. 9-5 


Oral Surgery. 




Main 2249 




827 


De Verges, P. 9-5 


General Practce. 




Main 2249 




827 


Indest, George 9-5 


General Practce. 




Main 2249 





177 



1105 MagTuder, A. L. 9-5 

Main 2249 
1108 Porter, A. E. 9-5 

1108 Bowman, H. L. 9-5 
1108 Tranchina, A. C. 9-5 

Stumpf , L. J. 1-5 :30 

Main 2543 

1111 Bloch, E. C. 9-5 

Main 1547 
1113 Russ, A. B. 9-3 

1116 Cooper, W. H. 9-5 

Main 1505 
1116 Pomeroy, Dean 9-5 

Main 1505 
1119 Provosty, G. M. 9-5 

Main 3113 
1160 Isaacson, F. M. 9-5 

Main 4033 

1124 Swords, C. W. 10-4 

Main 4264 

1125 Woodward, J. M. 8:30-5 
1125 Gibbons, C. N. 8:30-5 
1125 Nobbs, A. H. 8:30-5 

Main 277. 



General Practice 

General Practice. 
General Practice. 
General Practice. 
General Practice. 

General Practice. 

General Practice. 
General Practice. 

General Practice. 

General Practice. 

General Practice. 

General Practice. 

General Practice. 
General Practice. 
General Practice. 



Suite 1128— Telephone 4714. 
1128 Zeidler, J. C. 9-5 Oral Surgery. 

1128 Hullinghorst, G. J. 10-4 Crown Bridge. 

1128 Meetze, E. D. 9-5 Prosthesis. 



1129 

1132 

1131 
1131 
1135 



Eisemann, N. 9-5 

Main 2361 



General Practice 
and Rodiology. 

Orthodontia 



Gaston, Robert W. 9-5 

Main 2646 
Gamard, E. A. 9-5; Main 1442 General Practice. 
Gueno, E. A. 9-5; Main 1442 General Practice. 
Wahl, J. P. 9-5; Main 3216 Radiology, Diagnosis 

Exodontia and 
Minor Dental 
Surgery. 



1137 Adolph, C.A. 

1137 Arroyo, J. J. 

1221 Garcia, J. M. 

1624 Grozat, George 

1225 Mc Afee, S. H. 

1225 Schmidt, B. A. 

1227 Cognevich, L. 

1229 Duke, St. Clair 

1233 Price, H. G. 

1235 Bayon, J. P. 9 : 

123,5 Bayon, J. C. 

1237 Kells, C. fi. 

8-5 

1239 Varnado, M. B. 



9-5 ; Main 1468 General Practice. 
9-5 ; Main 1468 Exodontia and Con- 
ductive Anesthesia 
9 :30-5 ; Main 242 General Practice. 

B, 9-5 ; Main 2286 Orthodontia. 

8 :30-5 ; Main 4670 General Practice. 
8 :30-5 ; Main 4670 General Practice. 
9-5; General Practice, 

9-4 ; Main 3855 General Practice. 

9-5 ; Main 4933 General Practice. 
30-4:30 Main 1045 General Practice. 

9-5; Main 1045 General Practice. 
Oral Diagnosis and Minor 
; Main 418 Oral Surgery. 

8-5; Main 4140 General Practice. 



MAISON BLANCHE ANNEX. 
931 Canal Street. 



706 


Oser, Frank 9-5 ; Main 704 


716 


Fortier, E. L. 9-5 ; Main 2158 


716 


Gore, B. L. 9-5; Main 2158 


718 


Levert, W. F. 9-5 ; Main 519 


720 


Harvey, J. B. 9-4; Main 5326 


734 


Norton, E.L. 9-4; Main 389 


806 


Prowell, D. M. Main 


808 


Hull, J. S. 9-5; Main 899 


808 


Faulk, J. S. 9-5 ; Main 899 


812 


Jones, McGregor J. 9-5 ; Main 


816 


Colomb, John J. 9-5 ; Main 3160 


861 


Gibbons, John T. 9-5; Main 2737 


840 


Eckhardt, C. 11-5; Walnut 6702 Surgery and Pros 




thodontia. 



MEDICAL BUILDING. 
124 Baronne Street. 



308 Chapman, W. R. 

310 Foret, A. J. 

515 Moore, H.M. 

515 Moore, J. R. 



9-1; Main 1861 
9-5; Main 29 
9-5 
9-5 



General Practice. 
General Practice. 
General Practice. 
General Practice. 



17» 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DENTISTS. 



DR. ANTON C. TRANCHINA 

DENTIST. 

1108 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 9 to 5. 



DR. JOSEPH F. BERTUCCI 

DENTIST. 

Suite 703-4 Macheca Building 

New Orleans, La. 

Hours: 9 to 5. 

Phones: Office Main 2916, Residence 

Jackson 9184. 



DR. B. L. GORE 

DENTIST. 

712-714 Audubon Building, 

New Orleans. 



DR. FRANK S. OSER 

DENTIST. 

704 Maison Blanche Annex. 
(Formerly Audubon Building) 

Hours by Appointment. 

Telephone Main 4451. 



DR. GEO. BERNARD CROZAT 

ORTHODONTIA EXCLUSIVELY. 

1224 Maison Blanche Bdg. 

New Orleans. 



DR. W. F. LEVERT 

DENTIST. 
716 Audubon Building. 
Office Phone Main 5194. 

Residence Phone Galvez 386. 
New Orleans, La. 



J. A. GORMAN, D. D. S. 

PRACTICE LIMITED TO ORTHO- 
DONTIA AND DENTAL X-RAY. 

629-31 Maison Blanche Building. 

Phone Main 2077. 

Hours: 9 to 12 and Ito 5. 



^» » » »' 



DR. M. B. VARNADO 

DENTIST. 

1239 Maison Banche Building. 

Phone Main 6140. 

DR. CHARLES N. GIBBONS 

1127 Maison Blanche Building. 

Office Phone Main 277. 

Residence Phone Walnut 27. 



DR. F. M. ISAACSON 

DENTIST. 

Office Suite: 1120 Maison Blanche. 

Office Telephone Main 4033. 

Residence Telephone Uptown 336. 

By Appointment Only. 

DR. J. A. BUISSON 

DENTIST. 

520 Godchaux Building. 

Hours: 9 to 5. 

Phone Main 3868. 

DR. ALFRED A. LEEFE 

DENTIST. 

2131 Baronne Street 

Hours: 8 to 5. 

New Orleans^ La. 

DR. JAMES J. ARROYO 

DENTIST. 

Suite 1137 Maison Blanche Building. 

Hours: 9 to 5. 

New Orleans, La. 

Office Phone Main 1468. 

Residence Phone Hemlock 1631. 

DR. CHARLES' A. ADOLPH 

DENTIST. 

Suite 1137 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Phone Main 1468. 

Hours: 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. 



180 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS.— DENTISTS. 



DRS A. L. & E. B. DUCASSE 

AND A. C. MEYNIER 

DENTISTS. 

735 Maison Blanche Building. 

Phone Main 1468. 

Hours: 9 to 5. 

DR. JOHN J. COLOMB 

DENTIST. 

Office 818 Audubon Building. 

Phone Main 3492. 

DR. ROBERT W. GASTON 

PRACTICE LIMITED 

TO ORTHODONTIA. 

1131 Maison Blanche Building. 

Phone Main 2646. 

E. L. FORTIER, D. D. S. 

Suite 712-714 Audubon Building. 

Phone Main 2158. 

Hours 9 to 5. 

DR. EDWARD J. SKINNER 

EXODONTIA AND 

DENTAL RADIOGRAPHY. 

Suite 838 Maison Blanche Annex. 

Hours: 9 to 4. 

Sunday by Appointment Only. 

DR. J. E. WOODWARD 

602 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 8 to 5. 

Phone Main 3269. 

Residence: Uptown 444. 

DR. F. A. KELLER 

DENTIST. 

Suite 31, Cusachs Building. 

Office Phone Main 1093. 

Residence Phone Walnut 1479-W. 

Hours: 9 to 5. 

New Orleans, La. 



DR. JOS. A. GARCIA 
DENTIST. 

Room 1221 Maison Blanche Bldg. 

Phone Main 242. 

New Orleans, La. 

DR. G. W. DUBUISSON 
602 Macheca Building. 
Office Phone Main 3269. 
Residence Phone Uptown 1375. 

DR. J. FRANCIS CARTER 

RADIOLOGY AND DIAGNOSIS. 

Limited to Mouth, Teeth and Ja-vrs. 

417-18 Macheca Building. 

Hours: 8 to 12 and 1 to 5. 

Phone Main 375. 

DR. PAUL de VERGES 

DENTIST. 
815-827 Maison Blanche Building. 

DENTAL RADIOGRAPHY. 

DR. NATHAN EISENMANN 

DENTIST. 

1129 Maison Blanche, New Orleans. 

DR. CHARLES ECKHARDT 

DENTIST. 

840 Maison Blanche Annex. 

DR. E. L. NORTON 
DENTIST. 

Maison Blanche Building Annext, 
New Orleans. 



i^»» » ^ 



181 



r— 



PROFESSIONAL CARDS— DENTISTS. 



DR. J. P. WAHL 

DENTAL SURGEON. ' 

Practice Limited to Extraction of Tocth, 
Conductive and Nitrous O'xide Anes- 
thesia, Dental Radiography 
and Diagnosis. 

1135 MAISON BLANCHE BUILDING. 

Hours : 9 to 12 and 1 to .",. 

Phone Main 3216. 



MISS EDNA W. PATIN 

Maker of 

REMOVABLE ORTHODONTIC 
APPLIANCES. 

1133 Maison Blanche Building, 

Telephone, Main 4933. 



LATEST BOOKS ON 

DENTISTRY 
AUGUSTIN 

21C MAISON BLANCHE. 
Main 5214. 



BOOKS 



FOR 



DENTISTS 

Augustin 

Book 
Agency 

1216 Maison Blanche Bldg. 
NEW ORLEANS, LA. 

Main 5214. Uptown 1067 



182 



Tulane University 
of Louisiana 

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE 



( ESTABLISHED IN 1834 ) 



Admission : Jill students entering the Freshman Class will be re- \ 

quired to present credits for two ^ears of college Work* which j 

must include Chemistry^ ( General and Organic ), Physics and j 

Biology, with their laboratories, and at least one year in English j 

and one year in a modern foreign language. j 



Combined Courses : Premedical course of two years is offered in s 

the College of Jlrts and Sciences, which provides for systematic j 

work leading to the ^.S. degree at the end of the second year ♦ 

in the medical course. ♦ 



School of T^harmacy, School of T)entistry and 
Qraduale School of Medicine also. 

Women admitted to all Schools of the 
College of Medicine 

For bulletins and all other information, address 

Tulane College of Medicine 

p.' O. Box 770 
NEW ORLEANS, LA. 






I 




St. Mary's Sanitarium 



Baton Rouge, La, 



Conducted by 



Dr. W. B. Chamherlin 



Telephones 1645-931 



1303 Mam Street 



lb ' 



HISTORICAL SKETCHES 

OF THE 



ALFRED LEEFE, D.D.S. 
C. V. VIGNES, D.D.S. 



MEDICAL COLLEGES AND MEDICAL [ 

INSTITUTIONS OF LOUISIANA. I 



CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS DEPARTMENT. 



— » 

DR. ISADORE DYER ! 

DR. CHARLES CHASSAIGNAC j 

DR. ALBERT E. FOSSIER t 

DR. ERNEST S. LEWIS | 

DR. JOSEPH A. DANNA I 

DR. G. FARRAR PATTON 



I 

DR. MAUD LOEBER I 



I THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE OF THE TULANE UNI- 

VERSITY OF LOUISIANA. 

j By ISADORE Dyer, Ph. B., M. D., 

j Dean ayid Professor of Diseaes of the Skin. 

♦ 

As an alumnus of thirty years' standing, it is a privilege 
to assume the task of reviewing the history of the School of 
Medicine of the Tulane University of Louisiana, which began 
its usefulness in the year 1834, now having passed its eighty- 
fifth anniversary. 

The oldest school of medicine or of science in the South- 
west, the fourth in years in the whole South, this school has 
made medical history. 

Thomas Hunt, the first dean, and Warren Stone, were the 
chief organizers, ably supported by C. A. Luzenberg, E. H. 
Barton, James Jones, John Harrison and A. H. Cenas, who 
stand out among the pioneers in the faculty. 

The Medical College of Louisiana was organized in New 
Orleans in September, 1834; the first session began on the 
first Monday in January, 1835. 
The first faculty consisted of 

Thomas Hunt, Professor of Anatomy and Physiology. 
John Harrison, Adjunct in Anatomy. 
Chas. A. Luzenberg, Professor of Surgery. 
I J. Munroe Mackie, Professor Practice. 

j T. H. Ingalls, Professor of Chemistry. 

j August H. Cenas, Professor of Midwifery. 

} E. B. Smith, Professor of Materia Medica. 

j The opening lecture was delivered by Prof. Hunt, the 

j dean, to a student body of eight. During the first year 

j eleven students were matriculated. 

j April 2, 1835, a charter was granted by the State Legisla- 

j ture, and in March, 1836, degrees in medicine were conferred 

I on twelve graduates, two additional honorary degrees being 

♦ also conferred. These were the first degrees in science ever 
I conferred in Louisiana. 

♦ In 1838 the School of Pharmacy was established to grant 

♦ the degree of pharmacy, later Master of Pharmacy (which 
♦ 

1S6 




TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA. 

(St. Charles Avenue.) 



1 




^ptK^^^^^KK^KK^^^ 


1 




■ S^^^^^^J 








1 


.;Ml*.£i.SA.^ 




gT 


M ' iMiiiiil«*l 11^ 


i 



POST-GRADUATE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, TULANE. 
(Hutchinson Memorial.) 



degree was granted until 1908, when a reorganization of 
the Tulane College of Medicine provided for the lesser de- 
gree of Ph. G. and Ph. C). 

In 1843 the Legislature by enactment granted a lease on 
certain ground for ten years for the use of the Medical Col- 
lege, on the following conditions : 

1. That the Faculty of the College should discharge the 
duties of Attending Physicians and of Surgeons to the Char- 
ity Hospital, for the term of ten years, without compensa- 
tion. 

2. That the Faculty should receive as students, without 
fee or charge of any kind for their professional services, one 

• indigent person from each parish in the State. 

3. That the building erected on the lot of ground should 
become the property of the State at the expiration of ten 
years. From 1843 to 1847 this building (known later as the 
Law Department of the University of Louisiana) was used 
by the Medical College. 

Prior to 1843 the lectures of the Medical College were 
delivered at 41 Royal street, 14 St. Charles street, 239 Canal 
street, and at the Charity Hospital, where, in 1844, the 
Faculty erected an amphitheatre at a cost of $2,500. 

In 1845 the success of the college induced the Constitu- 
tional Convention to establish a State University in New Or- 
leans, of which the Medical College was made the Medical 
Department. 

In 1847 the Legislature appropriated a lot of ground and 
the sum of $40,000 to be used in erecting a suitable building 
for the Medical Department of the University of Louisiana. 
From 1847 to 1857 the State had contributed a total sum of 
$83,000 for the Medical Department. The Faculty added 
to the building and to its accessories until the building was 
brought to its general character, as shown in the accompany- 
ing cut, and as still remembered by the older members of the 
present generation (vacated in 1895) . 

Up to the year 1861 inclusive, four thousand and twenty- 
four students had been matriculated in the Medical College 
of Louisiana and in the Medical Department of the Univer- 
sity of Louisiana, or an average of about one hundred and 
I fifty per session since 1835. 

[ 

1S8 



During the first period of the College, from 1835 to 1861, 
the faculty was made up in each of its divisions as follows : 

Practice of Medicine : 
1835— J. M. Mackie 
1836-1839— E. H. Barton 
1839-1861— James Jones 

Chemistry : 

1835— T. R. Ingalls 

1836— W. B. Powell 

1836-1861— J. L. Riddell 
Surgery : 

1835-1837— Chas. A. Luzenberg 

1837-1861— Warren Stone 
Obstetrics : 

1835— A. H. Cenas 

1836— T. R. Ingalls 

1836-1839— James Jones 
Materia Medica : 

1835— E. H. Barton 

1836-1838— J. M. Mackie 

1838-1839— John Harrison and J. L. Riddell 

1839-1840— E. H. Barton 

1840-1842— S. W. Ruff 

1842-1848— W. M. Carpenter 

1848-1861— G. A. Nott 
Physiology : 

1835— Thomas Hunt 

1836-1849— John Harrison 

1849-1861— Thomas Hunt 
Anatomy : 

1835— Thomas Hunt 

1836-1839— Warren Stone 

1839-1841— G. A. Nott 

1841-1842— John Harrison 

1842-1856— A. J. Wedderbum 

1856-1857— J. C. Wedderstrandt 

1857-1858— J. C. Nott 

1858-1861— T. G. Richardson 
Demonstrators of Anatomy : 

1835-1837— Warren Stone 



189 



1837-1839 Wilcox 

1839-1840— George Morgan 

1840-1842— V. A. Drouillard 

1842-1844— J. F. Eustis 

1848-1853— Y. R. Lemonier 

1853-1856— C. C. Beard and S. Choppin 

1856-1858— G. S. Vance 

1858-1861— S. E. Chaille and W. C. Nicholls. 
Of those who brought the beginning of the school to a 
prosperous issue, and who served with particular note, 
were : 

Prof. Cenas (1834-1865), who died Jan. 10, 1878. 

Prof. Harrison (1834-1849, when he died March 13.) 

Prof. Hunt (1834-1879, when he died May 20). 

Prof. James Jones (1836-1873, when he died Oct. 10). 

Prof. J. L. Riddell (1856-1865, when he died Oct. 7). 

Prof. Warren Stone (1835-1872, when he resigned), 
who died October 10, 1873, and who still is known 
as New Orleans' most famous surgeon. 
In 1860-61 the Medical Department of the University of 
Louisiana had over 400 students. In 1862 New Orleans was 
captured by Federal forces and the Medical School sus- 
pended its function until the session of 1865-1866. Its 
building was occupied by the military forces, and one wing 
was used for a colored school, in charge of the Freedman's 
Bureau, with consequent deterioration of buildings and 
their equipment. The calls to arms carried both students 
and teachers into the Confederate service. Their record has 
never been completed, but of two hundred and forty grad- 
uates, one hundred and seventy served as medical officers, 
and of these thirteen were killed in battle. 

The Legislature of 1866 appropriated $25,000 to rehabili- 
tate the Medical Department of the University of Louisiana, 
and the Faculty was reorganized under the deanship of T. 
G. Richardson, who held that office for twenty years. The 
reorganized Faculty with J. W. Mallett in Chemistry, T. G. 
Richardson in Anatomy, Thomas Hunt in Physiology, G. 
A. Nott in Materia Medica, James Jones in Practice, Warren 
Stone in Surgery, A. H. Cenas in Midwifery, brought to- 
gether a new body of students, numbering 230, of whom 
71 were graduated in 1867. 



190 



♦ 
♦ 

In the 30 years to follow, newer teachers were brought j 



to the department, nearly all of whom have left the record 
of their endeavor: Joseph Jones in the Department of 
Chemistry (though much .better known for his ''Memoirs," 
which embraced almost every field of contemporaneous j 

medicine) ; S. Logan in Anatomy and later in Surgery; Ed- 
mond Souchon in Anatomy and Surgery (yet in service in 
his great Museum of Anatomy) ; and great citizen and 
lamented teacher and late dean, S. E. Chaill; Frank Haw- j 

thorne, who left little record in literature, but a large and j 

enthusiastic community of disciples, who still recall him as 
the Master in Therapeutics and Clinical Medicine; S. M. 
Bemiss in Pratice ; his successors, John B. Elliot (famil- 
iarly called "John B" by his students, behind his back) , now 
emeritus and retired, but still much alive in the minds and 
hearts of the present elder generation, all of whom recall 
his great philosophies of medicine and his gentle way of 
elucidating his theories, an exemplar in ethics and a Ches- 
terfield in manners; with him yet survives, the greatest 
Roman of them all, E. S. Lewis, who still, though emeritus, 
meets a weekly, class in obstetrics and gynecology. He has 
been in service since 1866, over fifty years, and yet bears 
the daily burden with a contagious philosophy which dis- | 

pels care; A. B. Miles, surgeon, par excellence, and teacher | 

in all things he undertook, beloved by all, and removed from j 

a stellar career by an untimely death. j 

In the developing progress of medical education, in the | 

years following the Civil War, the Tulane School of Medi- 1 

cine always stood with the vanguard. ♦ 

The beneficent gift of Mrs. T. G. Richardson made pos- ♦ 

sible the erection of the new college building on Canal street, ♦ 

erected in 1892-93. j 

Although the philonthropy of Mr. Paul Tulane had j 

changed the name of the old University of Louisiana to the j 

Tulane University of Louisiana (1884), the Medical Depart- } 

ment received no direct benefit, and really suffered in the j 

loss of possible support from the State. The Medical De- j 

partment remained autonomous in its administration and ! 

continued in name only as a part of the Tulane University, j 

so far as the administration was corcerned, and no part of ! 

the new fund was ever applied to the Medical School, ex- j 

cept to relieve the property of the school of taxation. j 



ini 



In 1902, however, the late A. C. Hutchison willed the bulk 
of his estate of about $800,000 to the Medical Department 
of the Tulane University of Louisiana and thereby provided 
the way to a greater development of the institution. 

In 1907, through the prevision of E. B. Craighead, then 
President of the University, among other great changes in 
the University, the Tulane Board of Administrators decided 
upon a reorganization of the Medical Department. The old 
regime passed in 1908. The immortal seven, in the essen- 
tial chairs of the Medical School, not only favored a plan 
which would expand the Faculty, but which would provide 
for the changes developing in medical education generally. 

Dean Chaill retired in June, 1908, after twenty-three 
years as dean ; with him there passed to emeritus positions 
L. F. Reynaud (Therapeutics), John B. Elliott (Practice), 
E. Souchon (Anatomy and Clinical Surgery). 

Of the older Faculty there remained : 

Rudolph Matas, in Surgery; J. T. Halsey, Therapeutics 
and Clinical Medicine; A. L. Metz, Chemistry and Medical 
Jurisprudence;* while E. S. Lewis remained at the head of 
the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology until his de- 
partment could be reorganized. 

In 1908 a new Medical Department opened with a student 
body of nearly five hundred. 

The reorganization had brought about the division of the 
four years of study by a separation of the first two years, 
to be taught in an entirely new structure erected and equipt 
at a cost of about $170,000 ; a rebuilt Chemistry building, on 
which $50,000 was spent, and with a dormitory costing 
about $40,000, to house the students of the first two years. 
In the downtowm college, new laboratories w^ere established 
and new developments created. 

The new school provided for separate chairs of 
Medicine, Pediatrics, 

Surgery, Diseases of the Skin, 

Obstetrics, Clinical and Operative 

Gynecology, Surgery, 

Anatomy, Eye, 



*Prof. Metz was retired under the provisions of the Car- 
negie Foundation in 1919, as Emeritus Professor of Chem- 
istry and Medical Jurisprudence. 



192 



Physiology, Ear, Nose and Throat, 

Pathology and Bacteriology, Hygiene, 
Chemistry, Tropical Medicine, 

Orthopedics and Surgical Experimental Medicine. 

Diseases of Children 

A co-ordination of the School of Medicine with a School 
of Pharmacy, a School of Dentistry, a Graduate School of 
Medicine (taking over the former New Orleans Polyclinic), 
and a School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine was per- 
fected, making the Tulane College of Medicine. (The 
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine was suspended 
in 1917, on account of the war, after five years of opera- 
tion.) 

A systematic Summer School of Medicine was estab- 
lished and is now operated annually. 

The introduction of all time teachers in the fundamental 
branches was consummated promptly and a staff of labora- 
tory teachers in all departments developed. 

In 1906-1907 there were seven professors and fifty-four 
other teachers ; in 1919-1920 there are thirty-one professors, 
twenty-one assistant professors and ninety-four junior 
teachers. 

In 1906-1907 there were seven laboratories; in 1919-1920 
there are nearly thirty separate laboratories. 

In 1911 Tulane offered pre-Medical courses to intending 
medical students, nearly two years in advance of like courses 
elsewhere. 

In 1906-1907 the budget for the Medical Department of 
Tulane* was $58,839; in 1918-1919 it was $86',396. The 
present faculty of Tulane numbers men of more than local 
reputation, members of national and international scientific 
bodies, writers of texts, and with outstanding positions in 
the fields of science and medical education. The cohesive 
loyalty of a large faculty has made the continued success 
of the institution which ranks in the first class of medical 
schools in the United States. 

SUMMARY OF HISTORICAL ITEMS. 

1834 — Established as the Medical College of Louisiana. 
1835 — Incorporated. 

1836— Eleven graduates at first commencement. 
1838— School of Pharmacy added. 



10^ 



1847 — Became the Medical Department of the Unicersity of 
Louisiana. 

1884 — Became the Medical Department of the Tulane Uni- 
versity of Louisiana. 

1913 — Name changed to the School of Medicine of the Tu- 
lane University of Louisiana. 

DEANS OF SCHOOL. 

1835 Thomas Hunt 1847-49. .A. J. Wedderbum 

1836 C. A. Luzenberg 1849 James Jones 

1837-40. .E. H. Barton 1850-53. .G. A. Nott 

1840 L H. Harrison 1853-62. .Thomas Hunt 

1841-43. .James Jones 1863-63 .. No sessions 

1843-45.. L H. Harrison 1865-85.. T. G. Richardson 

1845 A. A. Cenas 1885—08. .S. E. Chaille 

1846 W. M. Carpenter 1908 Isadore Dyer 

STUDENTS AND GRADUATES BY YEARS. 

Year. Students. Graduates. 

1835 11 

1836 16 14 

1846 100 19 

1856 223 67 

1866 185 35 

1876 120 50 

1886 266 78 

1896 379 92 

1906 516 102 

1916 *230 75 

1919-20 333 **84 

*War period. **Estimated. 

Tulane has received in the eighty-five years of its ex- 
istence from the 

State of Louisiana (prior to 1884) about $ 83,500 

Endowments and bequests, about 985,000 

With an outstanding bequest yet to mature of . . . 60,000 

$1,128,500 
This is represented by real estate and securities totaling 
approximately : 
In College Buildings — 

Richardson Memorial, with its equipment. ... $ 180,000 
Richardson Chemistry Building 50,000 



Richardson Dormitory 40,000 

Hutchinson Memorial ' 280,000 

Real estate set down at cost, about 225,000 

And about $500,000 on securities bearing interest 500,000 

Making a total of $1,275,000 

The net result is a first grade medical school with a po- 
tential faculty. 

In the ten years ending June 1, 1918, the Tulane School 
of Medicine spent upon equipment and the instruction of 
its students $400,000 over and above what the students' 
paid in that period. 

The Tulane School of Medicine is a member of the Asso- 
ciation of American Medical Colleges. ! 

The graduates of Tulane are eligible for the e^xamina- | 

tion of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons in » 

London and England. i 

The degrees granted in March, 1836, were the first scien- f 

tific degrees eve» conferred in Louisiana or in the South- ^ 

west. I 

Up to June, 1919, 4,936 were graduated from the School ♦ 

of Medicine. } 

MILITARY STATUS IN THE GREAT WAR. j 

Five hundred and seventy-eight of Tulane Alumni were j 

in service, so far as records are knowm. Colonels, 3 ; Lieu- j 

tenant Colonels, 11; Majors, 42; Captains, 104; First Lieu- } 

tenants, 418. [ 

Tulane furnished the personnel for the first Base Hos- 
pital Unit from the South, and Base Hospital No. 24 was 
in the field months before any other base hospital was ever 
organized. 

The faculty of Tulane had in service fifty-nine. Of these 
there were at the time of the armistice (or promoted since) 

Colonel 1 

Lieutenant Colonels 7 

Majors 15 

Captains 17 

First Lieutenants 19 

to which must be added those members of the Faculty who 
served locally with the Red Cross activities or in board 
work, which included practically all of the Faculty except- 
ing those on active duty with the army or navy. 



r.C) 



f 



The Dradom Sanatorium 

Covington, Louisiana 

[ Established 1904 ] 

New location on riverside drive, and new buildings 
specially equipped for the care and treatment of 
TUBERCULOSIS. ^ Advantages equal to any 
Sanatorium in higher altitutes. ^ Far advanced 
cases are not accepted. 

For informatian phone or write to 

Dr. Wallace J. Durel, Medical Director 

312 Medical Building, New Orleans, La, 

Sanatorium Phone— Covington 39 • 

New Orleans Office Phone— Main 3416 



IN MICHIGAN 



The Public Utility Commission of Michigan has just ordered^a $1.45 
gas rate for a city using artificial gas. It also placed the mini- 
mum B. T. U. (heat value) at 550. The B. T. U. in 
New Orleans often exceeds 600, and is never 
as low as 550. 



New Orleans Railway & Light Company 

JOHN S. BLEECKER, 

I General Manager ( 

1 I 

19^ 



The Rise and Progress of the Loyola 
Post-Graduate School of Medicine 

By JOSEPH A. DANNA, M. D., Secretary, New Orleans 

In June, 1914, a number of the younger progressive members of 
the Medical Profession of the City of New Orleans, realizing the 
ideal advantages at hand, and particularly the abundance of clinical 
material in the various departments of the world-renowned Charity 
Hospital, organized the Louisiana Post-Graduate School of Medicine. 
Some of these men were members of the visiting staff of the Charity 
Hospital, while others were not. A bill was therefore introduced 
In the State Legislature, then in session, granting to this school the 
same privilege as regards bringing students for teaching purposes 
into the Charity Hospital as were enjoyed by the already existing 
school. In October of the same year, the Board of Administrators 
of the Charity Hospital appointed on its visiting staff those members 
of the faculty not already on said staff, and gave them charge of 
wards, beds, and clinical material required in their various specialties. 

In the same month of June, 19 14, those members of the visiting 
staff of the Charity Hospital to the number of over sixty, who were 
not mem'bers of any teaching staff, with some who belonged to the 
staff of the pre-existing school, formed another organization known 
as the New Orleans Post-Graduate School of Medicine, and had a 
bill introduced in the Legislature granting them teaching rig'hts in the 
Charity Hospital. 

On July 9, 1 9 14, the Governor of the State of Louisiana signed 
an act which opened all the departments of the Charity Hospital to 
the faculties of both the Louisiana and the New Orleans Post-Grad- 
uate Sdhools of Medicine, for teaching purposes. 

These two Institutions worked side by side, competing with each 
other and with the third pre-existing Post-Graduate School, gaining } 

every year In strength and prestige. } 

In 191 5 the New Orleans Post-Graduate School of Medicine be- j 

came affiliated with Loyola University, and thenceforth enjoyed the j 

benefits of the influence and moral support derived therefrom. j 

♦ 



191 



!A desire which had long been felt by members of both schools 
finally materialized in August, 191 7, in a meeting of representatives 
!♦ of both Schools for the purpose of discussing the question of a com- 

bination of the efforts of both. 
j The result was a merger of both Schools into a new Corporation, 

I under the name of Loyola Post-Graduate School of Medicine. 

I In 19 19 the School occupied its new domicile on the corner of 

j Tulane Avenue and Villere Street, directly across from the front 

entrance of the Charitv Hospital. 



IDS 



THE SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY OF TULANE UNIVER- 
SITY OF LOUISIANA. 

By Alfred Leefe, D. D. S., Secretary. 

Tulane University of Louisiana, College of .Medicine, 
School of Dentistry, was incorporated in 1889 as the New 
Orleans College of Dentistry, and was located at 547 to 549 
Carondelet street. 

Its faculty comprised seven professors, seven demonstra- 
tors and assistant demonstrators. The first graduating 
class, which was in 1900, numbered only 3. 

In October, 1903, the board of directors purchased their 
new location at 831 Carondelet street, completely renovated, } 

remodeled the property and reorganized their faculty. j 

On October 13, 1908, the buildings were destroyed by fire j 

and the college was forced to move their quarters to the then j 

known New Orleans PolycHnic Building, 1403 Tulane } 

avenue, where it remained until October, 1909, when it was j 

absorbed by the Tulane University of Louisiana and became j 

known as the School of Dentistry of the College of Medicine j 
of the Tulane University of Louisiana. 

Its consolidation with the Tulane University enlarged its 
equipment and advantages for instruction and placed it in 
the front ranks of dental schools in the country. 

The course of instruction has been increased from three 

to four years, and the entrance requirements have been j 

placed at fifteen units, which is the required number for all j 

Class A dental schools in the country. j 

I 

I 
I 



100 



Ji! 



The faculty at present comprises 16 full professors, ,5 as- 
sistant professors, and 31 demonstrators, instructors and as- 
sistant demonstrators. 

This school is a member of the National Association of 
Dental Faculties, the American Institute of Dental Teach- 
ers, and is recognized by the National Association of Dental 
Examiners. 

The success of the graduates of this school, which comes 
from all parts of the world, sufficiently attests the wisdom 
of .its plan of teaching, and has won the approval of the 
proficiency of its alumni and place it in the front rank of 
the dental schools. 



200 



I 
I 

HISTORICAL SKETCH OF TOURO INFIRMARY. | 

/ By Maud Loeber, M., D., j 

Instructor in Pediatrics, Tulane School of Medicine. \ 

The Touro Infirmary had its modest beginning sixty-five ♦ 

years ago in a residence at the Levee and Gaiennie street. j 

This property was a part of a bequest of $40,000 made by ♦ 

the philanthropist, Judah Touro, for the relief of the suffer- j 

ing and needy of New Orleans. With the forward march | 

of the city in population and development, this institution 
has gone hand in hand, expanding to meet the increase in 
numbers to be cared for, improving with the progress of 
science and meeting the vicissitudes that fell to the lot of the 
growing community. 

For the first few years of its existence the hospital was 
privately conducted by Dr. Bensagen : yet prior to this time 
care was given to the indigent, aged and infirm. Upon the 
consolidation of the Touro Infirmary Society with the 
Hebrew Benevolent Association, the institution was con- 
verted into a Jewish hospital in 1868. Dr. Frederick Loeber 
in the following year, 1869, became house surgeon during 
the administration of first president of the board of man- 
agers, Lambei't B. Cain. It was under the wise guidance of 
Dr. Loeber, with the help of such far-seeing men as Julius 
Weis and Joseph Magner, that during the following thirty 
years the hospital enlarged its scope and kept abreast of the 
times. 

The B'nai B'rith inaugurated the free care of its sick mem- 
bers as early as 1877, and since that time has continued a 
supporter of the Touro. 

In 1883 the activity of the hospital was enlarged by a de- } 

cision of the board of managers to include, in addition to j 

Jewish patients, patients from other sects among those re- | 

ceiving treatment and care in the free wards. Today one j 

finds that the percentage of non-Jewish patiients is far in j 

excess of the Jewish patients. ♦ 

The year 1888 marked the opening of the outdoor clinic, j 

and at the end of the first year statistics show 1,728 patients j 

^^^^^ ___^ ♦ 

201 



received medical treatment through this department. To- 
day there are approximately 95,473 patients receiving care. 
And to give adequate and thorough attention to this large 
body of outdoor patients, a Social Service Department has 
been organized. 

It would here be opportune to mention with what fine 
spirit the Touro entered into the care of the stricken during 
the great epidemics through which the city passed in the 
latter half of the last century. Thousands of patients were 
treated, not only within the hospital, but help and care were 
given to many sick in their own homes. 

The next steps in advance made by the Touro was in 1896, 
when the Training Schools for Nurses was established. This 
school today ranks with the first-class schools of its kind 
in the country. 

Through the benificence of Julius Weis, one-time presi- 
dent of the board, and the faithful friend and adviser of the 
hospital, the department which cares for the aged and in- 
firm was endowed with the sum of $25,000, and in 1899 
took up its domicile on the hospital grounds in the Home 
which it now occupies. 

Throughout the years since the founding of Touro In- 
frmary in 1854 it has been necessary to provide newer and 
more modern buildings to accommodate the increase in its 
work. The dwelling house in Gaiennie Street was soon out- 
grown and the present site on Prytannia Street was secured, 
where, in 1882, new and larger buildings were erected, the 
whole at cost of $90,000. At intervals of about ten years 
it was found necessary to make extensive changes, always 
in the direction of renovating, enlarging and modernizing 
the buildings. In 1906 the latest addition to the buildings 
was made in the fireproof pavilions that form the front of 
the Touro as we now know it. It is interesting to take note 
of the popular support that this institution has elicited dur- 
ing the many periods of its enlargement. Hugs debts were 
incurred, and these were always met by popular subscrip- 
tion. Through fairs, lotteries, or by the philanthropy of 
such public-spirited individuals as Leon Godchaux, who 
made possible the building last added to the infirmary. Even . 
at the present writing, Mrs. Henry Newman has given $50,- 
000 toward modernizing and enlarging the Maternity De- 
partment, and Mr. J. K. Newman has donated $50,000 to- 



202 






ward a new free clinic department, to which has been added 
a further sum of $50,000 by the children of Mrs. I. Newman, 
who also left Touro the sum of $10,000 for furnishing the 
free clinic ; and again a popular subscription to the extent of 
$600,000 is being raised for the enlarging of the out-door 
free clinic building, equipment and facilities, its Social Ser- 
vice Department, and always, as is and has been, its policy 
the establishment of preventive medical or Public Health 
Department. 

The city of New Orleans in recognition of the charitable 
work of the hospital, appropriates from its annual budget 
the sum of $13,000. 

In keeping with the trend of the management of the best 
hospitals throughout the country, the office of house sur- 
geon was superseded by the staff of physicians, each a leader 
in his chosen branch of medicine, the change of the old 
order to the new, taking place in 1907, when Dr. Wm. Kohl- 
man resigned to be elected to the staff as the chief of the 
gynecological service. 

Touro is ever looking forward to render the most efficient 
service to suffering humanity. 



203 



PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL OF NEW ORLEANS. 
By W. D. PHILLIPS, M. D., New Orleans. 



The Presbyterian Hospital is located in the center of 
the business section of New Orleans, only seven blocks from 

Canal Street and easily accessible to all of the railroad de- j 

pots, as well as the principal hotels It occupies a space of } 

ground situated in the center of the block bounded by { 

Carondelet, Baronne, Girod and Julia Streets with a sub- { 

stantial frontage on Carondelet Street and one hundred and { 

fifteen feet frontage on Baronne. { 

The buildings consist of a main brick building and an } 

annex three stories high, containing seventy-four rooms ! 
and accomodating ninety-five patients. The top floor of ' | 

the annex is devoted to the Surgical Department and con- { 

tains up-to-date sanitary operating rooms. Separate from j 

this building and facing on Girod Street, is a m,odern two- | 

story brick building, the lower floor of which is used entirely I 

for an Out-Patient Department for the poor and indigent ^ 

sick of New Orleans and the surrounding country. The floor « 

plan is in keeping with new ideas of Clinics, having a large ♦ 

reception room in the center and various consultation rooms I 

for the specialists, grouped around this. The second | 

floor of which is modern in every detail is used as a Nurses [ 

Dormitory . [ 

The Presbyterian Hospital of New Orleans originated J 

during the year 1909. For several years previous to this ♦ 

the idea of establishing a modern hospital in the center of | 

the business district of New Orleans, devoted to the care of j 

both rich and poor, had been considered by a group of \ 

prominent laymen and physicians. This idea developed into j 

a reality during the year 1908, when a donation of three j 

five dollar bills was made for this purpose. This was soon ! 

increased by other donations and when the amount had | 

reached five hundred dollars, a free clinic for the poor was { 

opened in a rented building at 628 Carondelet Street. This \ 

Clinic continued to grow and it soon became apparent that j 

^^^^^^ ♦ 

205 



//V^^' 


!■■■■■■ 


/ ■■ 

/ / 


^^^^H 




H^^^l 


Imii 


^Bh^-' il^^^^H 



/IP 






asA 






\ 



more spacious quarters must be obtained and the Hospital 
was incorporated as the Presbyterian Hospital of New Or- 
leans in 1909 and in August 1910 the corporation acquired 
by purchase the name and property of the old New Orleans 
Sanitarium, an Institution which had originated in and 
since that time had remained under the care and supervis- 
ion of a group of prominent New Orleans Physicians and 
Surgeons. Since then the growth of the Hospital has been 
very rapid. In addition to the Modern Clinic Building, 
which was erected in 1895, the management recently pur- 
chased additional frontage on Earonne Street, between 
Girod and Julia, which together with the ground already 
owned, gives the Hospital one hundred and fifteen feet 
frontage on that important thoroughfare. On this site 
ground was broken on January 14th, 1920, for a new admin- 
istration Builuding which will exemplify modern hospital 
construction and facilities. 

The management of the Presbyterian Hospital is under 
Christian auspices, but its service is absolutely non-sec- 
tarian. The aim of the Hospital is to furnish to the rich 
and poor alike, the very best medical and surgical attention 
possible. The outstanding feature of the Institution are its 
modern equipment for its Free Clinic Service, its efficient 
Pathological Department and its growing Department in 
Roentgenology and Radium Therapy. 

The Presbyterian Hospital also conducts a Training 
School for Nurses, which is the oldest school for nurses in 
the State. On account of the increasing demand for service 
at the Hospital, various changes are contemplated for the 
year ,1920. Among these are the New^ Administration 
Building, on Baronne Street, which will relieve the much 
congested room and ward space of the old building. The 
top floor of the new building will be devoted to the surgical 
v^/ork in the form of modern and well lighted operating 
rooms. During the year 1919, ten thousands visits were 
made by men, women and children and 1629 free prescript- 
ions were served in the Corinne Casanas Free Out-Patient 
Department of the Hospital. That rapidly growing branch 
of the Hospital has made necessary the establishment of a 
Social Service Department, which will be inaugrated during 
the next few months. 



207 



The staff of the Presbyterian Hospital is as follows : 
Board of Managers. 

Dr. J. C. Barr President 

Hon. W. 0. Hart Vice-President. 

Dr. A. 0. Browne Secretary 

Mr. W. Frank, Jr Treasurer. 

Medical Advisory Committee. 

Dr. J. P. O'Kelley Chairman. 

Dr. D. L. Watson Secretary. 

Members. 

Dr. '\Nm, D. Phillips, Dr. C. Grenes Cole, Dr. J. L. Lewis. 



i Department of Roentgenology and Radium Therapy. 



I Dr. Adolph Henriques, and assistants : Dr. L. J. Menville, 

} Dr. L. W. Magruder, Dr. W. G. Millholland. 

I Pathological Department. 

! . Dr. C. W. Duval, Director. 

Dr. Wm. H Harris Pathologist. 



j 

j Dr. A. V. Friedrichs Assistant Pathologist. 

♦ Resident Physicians. 

I Dr. R. A. Hall. Dr. P. A. Dillman. 

♦ Resident Staff. 

♦ Mr. J. L. Bordette, Business Manager; Mrs. M. Michel, 

♦ Superintendent of Nurses ; Mrs. Rebecca Hite Ara- 
I gon, Night Supervisor; Miss A. Sampley, Su- 

♦ pervisor of Operating Room; Mrs. W. 
I Young, Anestretist. 



} Visiting Staff — Medical and Surgical. 

j Dr. J. M. Batchelor Dr. C. F. Gelbke 

♦ Dr. M. P. Boebinger Dr. A. 0. Hoefeld 

I Dr. R. Bernhard Dr. R. B. Harrison 

j Dr. George S. Bel Dr. Joseph Hume 

Dr. C. G. Cole Dr. John R. Hume 

j Dr. H. S. Cocram Dr. G. J. Hauer 

j Dr. L. C. Chamberlain Dr. A. Jacoby 

I • Dr. P. J. Carter Dr. W. M. Johnson 

I Dr. S. M. D. Clark Dr. A. Jacobs 

j Dr. F. J. Chalaron Dr. S. C. Jamison 

j Dr. L. L, Cazenavette Dr. E. L. King 



>08 



Dr R. A. Davis 
Dr. E. M. Dupaquiei 
Dr. E. D. Fenner 
Dr. V. H. Fuchs 
Dr. S. Geismar 
Dr. H. J. Lindner 



Dr. J. P. O'Kelley 
Dr. T. S. Kavanagh 
Dr. J. L. Lewis 
Dr. F. E. Lamothe 
Dr. J. W. Lindner 



Medical Officers of Hospital. 



Dr. C. P. May 
Dr. C. J. Miller 
Dr. F. A. Overbay 
Dr. F. W. Parham 
Dr. John G. Pratt 
Dr. G. K. Pratt 
Dr. W. T. Patton 
Dr. Wm. D. Phillip 
Dr. L.Mitchell 
Dr. T. R. Rudolf 



Dr. E. A. Robin 
Dr. W. G. Troescher 
Dr. P. L. Thibaut, 
Dr. T. B. Sellers 
Dr. John Smythe 
Dr. V. C. Smith 
Dr. E. F. Salerno 
Dr. L. Sexton 
Dr. D. L. Watson 
Dr. C. A. Wallbillich 



209 



Augustin Library 

OF 

Medical Research 

ANNOUNCEMENT 



MR. GEORGE AUGUSTIN, 

who has been connected with the Orleans Parish Medical Society 
as librarian for nearly twenty years, announces the establishment 
of the 

AUGUSTIN LIBRARY OF MEDICAL RESEARCH 

at 1216 Maison Blanche Building, New Orleans, Louisiana. 

Particular attention given to the compiling of medical biblio- 
graphies, medical abstract work (English, French, German, 
Italian, Spanish), and the editing of manuscripts intended for 
publication. All w^ork strictly confidential. 

For the convenience of its patrons, the AUGUSTIN LIBRARY 
OF MEDICAL RESEARCH will have in stock the latest and best 
medical books and journals, w^hich will be sold at catalog prices. 

Special journals, not found in any other library or bookshop 
in New Orleans, will be kept on file for reference purposes. This 
service will be free to our patrons. 

We will lend MEDICAL BOOKS and MEDICAL JOURNALS 
for a fee of TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER WEEK. Messenger 
service extra. Annual subscription, Ten Dollars. 

The Uptown Branch of the AUGUSTIN LIBRARY OF MEDI- 
CAL RESEARCH will be located at 1115 Louisiana Avenue, 
! near Magazine, w^here a cozy reading-room will b^ at the service 

j of the ethical medical profession of the State. This being only 

j a few^ blocks from Touro Infirmary, will be found quite a conve- 

I nience to the eminent group of medical men who have their 

{ offices near that historis institution and who desire to look up 

j the latest medical literature without having the trouble to take 

I a trip "Dow^ntow^n" to do so. 



Phones: Main 5214; Uptown 1067. 
Hours: 10 to 5, and by appointment. Sundays, by appointment. 



210 



THE CHARITY HOSPITAL OF LOUISIANA, j 

PAST AND PRESENT. { 



By Albert E. Fossier, M. D., \ 

♦ 

Professor of Medical Diagonsis, Post-Graduate School of j 

Medicine, Tulane University of Louisiana, j 

New Orleans. j 

♦ 

In New Orleans to-day there towers a great monument — j 

not the masterpiece of some eminent sculptor, not a mass of ♦ 

stone perpetuating the name of some great warrior, prom- ♦ 

inent stateman or famed philanthropist, nor yet a magnifi- ♦ 

cent edifice recording a great epochal event or a well- ♦ 

known historical achievement — but an institution dedicated ♦ 

to the most supreme work of Charity, alleviation of suffer- ♦ 

ing and the healing of the sick — the Charity Hospital of ♦ 

Louisiana, founded by the sailor, Jean Louis. j 



In the year 1736 this sailor of the Company of the In- j 

dies left an holographic will, stating therein that he was j 

unmarried and childless and wished to bequeath his prop- j 

erty, which after liquidating all claims, consisted of 10,000 } 

livres, for the founding of a hospital. j 

A site was chosen at the extremity of the town, which, ' ♦ 

Miro states, stood upon a portion of the gound allotted to ♦ 

the city's fortification and to-day corresponds to the ♦ 

square bounded by Rampart, Basin, St. Peter and Toulouse ♦ 
streets. The house of Madame De Kelly (formerly a con- * I 

vent) was bought by Bienville and Salmon. Half of the j 

money was expended for beds and the usual equipment. j 

With the remainder, augmented bj^ the help of the natives, j 

a large brick hall was built. ♦ 

Little did Jean Louis in his wildest flight of fancy ever j 

dream that this village built on a low, insalubrious swamp, | 

infested with mosquitoes and subject to periodical inunda- | 

tions, would become a great city, a metropolis whose influ- j 

ence, commerce and culture would radiate to the remotest } 

parts of the world; and that from his small bequest, a j 

modest hospital would have as its offspring this great j 

institution, the pride of Louisiana, the Charity Hospital. j 



211 



For over forty , years this Hospice des Pauvres was a 
haven of hope for and administered to the suffering of 
those intrepid travelers and adventurous pioneers who, 
drawn by the lure of a promised El Dorado and the falla 
cious inducements held out by the wily John Law, braved 
the privations, hardships and pestilences of a primeval coun- 
try and become stranded on our shores. 

Miro tells us that the devastating hurricane which played 
havoc with the city in the summer of the year 1779 con- 
verted the Jean Louis Hospital into a heap of ruins and 
that only the kitchen and the storehouse escaped the fury 
of the storm. The destruction of this institution resulted 
in so much consternation and suffering that in speaking 
of the calamity Don Estavan Miro says ''many sick paupers 
are now wandering throughout the city in quest of shelter 
and succor and are hourly exposed to perish upon the very 
streets, or in some obscure by-comer." 

Don Andres de Almonester y Rexas, a pecunious old 
noble gentleman, who previously had been a war clerk 
and a civil notary, impelled by the suffering and destitu- 
tion of the colonists, generously offered to rebuild the 
hospital at his own expense, and to appropriate a yearly 
sum for its support. He offered the magnificent amount 
of $114,000.00. Strange to say, such a liberal gift was 
conditioned on the using of the salvage material from the 
destroyed building. The peculiar restriction, so inconsist- 
ent, with such a generous endowment, only increased the 
astounding opposition to the acceptance of the gift by mem- 
bers of the Cabildo, despite so much suffering and the 
dire necessity for such an institution, provoked harsh, 
humiliating and unjust ridicule. 

Miro, in defense of Don Almonester, spoke as follows : 
"Indeed this provision of Don Almonester cannot furnish 
much assistance to his costly undertaking ; but why all this 
astonishment at the disposal he has thought proper to make 
of this building material? And Why should this worthy 
alms-giver be looked upon in so questionable a light? If, 
at the time when the building was still standing, some one 
would have offered to build an annex to it, would any ob- 
jection have been made, had one of its walls looking on the 
improved side been utilized in the said construction? Be it 
what it may, I cannot view him in any other light than that 



212 



of a fellow-citizen eagerly bent on performing a charitable 
work; and a public benefactor worthy of the highest praise, 
so much the more as he comes forth, holding out a most 
lavish offering for the reconstruction of the hospital, which, 
we must confess, would have paved a very difficult under- 
taking at the present time. Having so long delayed in ap- 
plying for aid for the reconstruction of the hospital, it is 
not less surprising that you should have taken this matter 
in hand at the very time when unexpected assistance is be- 
ing tendered from other quarters, and which might be 
withdrawn were I to acquiesce in your pretentions to have 
this worthy gentleman appear before you, and beg your 
leave for the accomplishment of a work of public utility." 

It was not until the year 1782 that King Charles III 
gave his consent to the building of the hospital. In that 
same year, on the same site, ground was broken for the 
new Hospital of St. Charles. In 1784 a commodious sub- 
stantial brick edifice rose from the ruins of the original hos- 
pital of Jean Louis. 

With the .departure of Miro for Spain, Dom Almonester 
immediately felt the loss of his protector's friendship and 
admiration, for it was not shared by the newly appointed 
Governor, Baron de Carondelet. Immediately he was un- 
justly deprived of all control in the affairs and manage- 
ment of the hospital he so richly endowed and to which he 
gave such a liberal support. 

So great an injustice and indignity was not passively 
submited to bj^ the philanthropist. He presented his 
claims to his King, who in answer to his petition issued a 
''real cedula" on April 13th, 1793 (the original charter of 
the Charity Hospital) which proclaimed him its founder, 
patron and endower. Besides he was knighted in the Royal 
Order of San Carlos, appointed Regidor Perpetuo and 
Royal Alferez of the Cabildo, and given the rank of Colonel 
of the Mitia Battalion of the city. 

Although highly honored by a grateful monarch, his 
beneficence was a source of annoyance and grief to his 
very last day, by reason of the jealousies, bickerings and 
the ingratitude of the members of the Cabildo and the 
Colonists. Don Almonester died on the 26th of April, 
1798, and was interred in the St. Louis Cathedral. Dr. 
James Leduc is the first house surgeon mentioned in the 



213 



-»4 



I hisotrical records of that period. He was replaced by Doctor 

I Louis Giovelinna, a protege of Don Almonester, who, after 

j being proclaimed patron and founder of the Hospital by 

royal edict, appointed the Spaniard to the position of phy- 
sician and surgeon, with a monthly salary of thirty dollars. 
Dr. Blonquet succeeded Dr. Giovelinna, and was followed 
by Dr. Sanchez. The San Carlos Hospital and many public 
buildings were reduced to a mass of ashes by the great con- 
flagration which swept the city on that memorable night 
of the 23rd of September of the year 1809. 

A second time the destruction of the hospital caused in- 
tense suffering and hardship to the indigent sick. The pa- 
tients were quartered by Mayor James Mather for a day 
only in the gallery of the upper floor of the Cabildo, then 
• the City Hall. 

Temporary quarters were provided on the Jourdan Plan- 
tation, which was situated on the site of the Industrial 
Canal. This location was abandoned after causing six 
months of suffering and discomfort to the patients. For 
five years not a suitable place for the care of the sick was 
procured, and it was not until the year 1814 that the square 
bounded by Canal, Common, Phillipa (now Dryades) and 
Baronne was sold by the city to the administration of the 
Charity Hospital for the construction of a building. 

The corner-stone was laid in 1815, and Dr. McConnell was 
the House Surgeon. In the year 1823 he was succeeded by 
Dr. John Rollins. Dr. David Kerr, a British army surgeon, 
and a veteran of the Battle of New Orleans, after the crush- 
ing defeat of General Packenham, true to the noblest tradi- 
tions of his profession, permitted himself to be captured 
that he might administer to his wounded soldiers. This 
gallantry gained for him the admiration and respect of his 
enemies ; iie made the city his home, and in the year 1827 
was appointed House Surgeon to the Hospital. 

The great increase of population rendered a larger and 
more commodious institution necessary, and the location 
was sold to the State for $125,000.00. This building was 
subsequently known as the State House and later as the 
University Block or Place. 

The present site of the Charity Hospital was selected in 
1832, and the building was completed during the winter of 



2J4 



»»»■»■ ^ 



1833. The cost of the grounds and building amounted to 
$150,000.00. 

The Sisters of Charity inaugurated their long period of 
admirable devotion to the sick and afflicted on January 6, 

1834. Too much cannot be said in praise of these pious 
religieuses, who spurned all mundane glory and whose lives 
were vowed to continuous toil for the alleviation of suffer- 
ing and who braved pestilences and epidemics and even 
risked existence itself for the devoted love of humanity. 

In the year 1841 the Legislature appropriated funds to 
build a lunatice asylum. A large, commodious structure, 
three stories high, was constructed in the rear of the main 
building. This institution had ample bathing facilities 
and was modern and well equipped for the care of these 
unfortunates. 

Farther in the rear of the main building the Dead House 
was situated. In a contemporary article we read : 'Tt is 
doubtful whether any city in the world presents so pleasant 
and convenient a place for the study of anatomy as this 
Dead Plouse. Well lighted, well ventilated, a hydrant of 
clear gushing water, and plenty of fresh subject-^ — wliat 
more could be desired!" 

This interesting item is taken from the January number 
of the year 1847 of the Neic Orleans Medical and Snrrjical 
Journal of the year 1847 : 

*We are gratified to learn that the administrators of the 
institution have determined to erect an amphitheatre for 
the performance of surgical operations. Such a thing has 
long been wanted Heretofore operations were per termed 
in the wards to the great terror of the surrounding sick, 
with the inconveniences to the operating surgeon, and 
where it was impossible for a large number of spectators 
to witness what was done. A good amphitheatre is indis- 
pensably necessary to a large hospital, and we are glad to 
hear that the oen proposed is to be erected as soon as 
possible." 

In January, 1848, the faculty of the Louisiana Medical 
College petitioned the Legislature for the grant of a certain 
portion of ground to build a college, in consideration of 
which they offered their services gratis to the hospital. 
The granting of this exclusive privilege to the medical 
faculty was strenuously opposed by the non-teachers, the 



L^ 



215 



j result of which was the donation of a site for the College 

j and the decision that the teachers should be entitled to no 

j preference in the election of a visiting staff. The staff 

I was increased to two visiting surgeons and eight physi- 

{ cians. 

j The annual report of 1847 is of historical interest. We 

j find the following: 

Main Building. 

Admitted :..... 11,690 

Discharged 9,369 

i Died 2,037 

} Remaining on the 1st of January, 1848 828 



♦ Lunatic Asylum. 

I Admitted 678 

j Discharged 541 

i Died -. 85 

j Remaining on the 1st of January, 1848 125 

I "These are the largest figures ever seen on the books of 

I the Charity Hospital. No hospital should be permitted to 

♦ take in double the number of patients, it can entertain com- 
fortably, for it cannot be done in justice to the sick. The 
wards of the hospital are literally crammed. A row of 
beds extend all around the walls and another in the middle 
of the floor. Many patients have to sit all day and to lie 
upon pallets at night. The whole house is infected with 
typhoid fever, thus rendering it dangerous for patients 
laboring under other diseases to go there. The house stu- 
dents, nurses and sisters of charity are suffering from 
the disease. Diarrheoa and dysentery are also common, 
and there are seven or eight cases of smallpox in the ad- 
joining lunatic asylum. But one thing is lacking to com- 
plete the catalogue of miseries — erysipelas will probably 
break out before long, and then the cup will be full. We 
deem it our duty to record these melancholy facts to make 
up the medical history of the day. / When evils become glar- 
ing and outrageous they enforce reform, and often not 
before." 

This great institution was always overtaxed to meet the 
urgent need of this rapidly growing town. The fact that 
New Orleans was one of the largest ports of the country 
brought many strangers to our shores. These immigrants 



tio 



t 

were not acclimated and were victims of the very frequent j 

epidemics of yellow and typhoid fevers and became easy j 

prey to malaria. j 

The cry of reform is echoing through the realms of time, j 

and to this very day, nearly two centuries sincd the birth ♦ 

of our great Hospital, we hear the selfsame pleas and com- j 

plaints similarly followed by varied suggestions for better- j 

ment; yet, step by step, and year by year, it has grown j 

from a hovel housing a few indigent poor, to the present ! 

magnificent instituiton, one of the largest in the country. j 

The rapid evolutionary strides in medicine during the j 

end of the last century stimulated the greatest improve- j 

ments in the history of the Charity Hospital. | 

In 1893 the Training School for Nurses was established. j 

The old germ-laden operating room was supplanted by j 

the magnificent Miles Surgical Amphitheatre in 1895. ♦ 

Through the beneficence of Mrs. Milliken an imposing ♦ 

edifice, consecrated to the care of children, was added to the j 

rapidly growing institution in 1898. The two latest addi- j 

tions were the Hutchinson Memorial for nurses and the j 

Delgado Memorial. 1 

In justice to the departed house surgeons who devoted | 

the best part of their years to the care of the afflicted. j 

their names should be inscribed on the tablet recently built 
in the main hall of their institution. These famous physi- 
cians, skilled surgeons and devoted philanthropists were : 

Drs. James Leduc, Don Louis Giovelinna, Blanquet. 
Sanchez, McConnell, John Rollins, David Kerr, J. C. P. 
Wedderstrandt, C. A. Luzenburg, Morgan, J. C. P. Wedder- 
strandt, J. D. Foster, A. W| Smyth, A. W. DeRoaldes and 
A. B. Miles. 

All honor and credit for the founding of the Charity 
Hospital must be given to Jean, Louis. He was not pro- 
claimed its founder by a friendly king, nor did he enjoy the 
influence of wealth and nobility, no honors and no dignites 
were heaped upon his memory ; none the less, it should be ac- 
knowledged that his modest legacy was the seed from w^hich 
sprung the present institution. 

Although there is not an inscription, not a monument nor 
even a cathedral for his sepulchre, this humble sailor, the 
first benefactor of our city, could have with all humility 
repeated the words of the ancient bard : 

"Exegi monumentum aere perennius 
Regalique situ pyramidum altius. 
Quod non imber edax, non Aquilo impotens 
Possit diruere aut innumerabilis 
Annorum series et fuga temporum. 
Non omnis moriar: 



-•17 



Luis Mejia 

TRANSLATOR 

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1621 Coliseum Street New Orleans, La. 



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HISTORICAL SKETCH OF HOTEL DIEU. 

By E. S. Lewis, M. D., 

Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 

School of Medicine, Tulane University. 

The Hotel Dieu Sanitarium, one of the oldest of the large 
private hospitals in the South, was erected by the Order of 
St. Vincent de Paul on Tulane Avenue, between Bertrand 
and Johnson Streets, in 1850. Sister Theresa, who became 
its first Superior, accompanied by three other Sisters, su- 
pervised its construction and equipment. The main build- 
ing is. of brick cemented over, three stories high, 116 feet 
long and 50 feet wide, with two three-story frame wings 
extending backwards from its side ends which with a brick 
wall back enclosed a large grass-covered court. The main 
building contained forty rooms. The north side wing 
served for wards and for the accommodation of helps and 
such nurses as there were in those days. The other was 
used as a dormitory for the Sisters, kitchen, laundry and 
storerooms. The institution could accommodate about 75 
patients. Its first house physician was Dr. Boj^er, an emi- 
nent practitioner of medicine in New Orleans, having a 
large and lucrative practice. 

This old institution is rich in memories of trying times 
of the Federal occupation of the city during the Civil War, 
reconstruction period and epidemics of yellow fever now 
happily of the past. An interesting and tragic incident 
occurred during the epidemic of 1878. A physician, Dr. 
Hibbe, adyocated the cold water treatment for yellow fever. 
Falling a victim himself, he was taken to the Hotel Dieu, 
and in the presence of several physicians, among whom 
were Dr. Chopin, President of the State Board of Health, 
several others whom I do not recall, and myself, he directed 
the treatment to be followed. He was stripped, cold water 
sprinkled over him continuously until he became chilled. 
He was then removed from the table to his bed. His tem- 
perature had not been reduced, suppression of urine soon 
followed accompanied by uraemic convulsions and death. 



219 



r— 



The advance in surgery, bacteriology, hygiene and sani- 
tation necessitated radical changes which could not be 
properly effected in an old institution. It is true efforts 
were made in that direction. In 1899, Sister Raphael being 
Superior, a training school was opened. She was succeeded 
by Sister Lucia Felicetas. Then followed Sister Mary 
Anne, a lady of rare judgment with a heart of gold. Un- 
der her administration between 1901 and 1903 a room was 
fitted for sterilizing purposes, the operating room tile- 
floored and its walls enamel-painted.' An interne was also 
appointed. Dr. A. J. Danna, then a young physician, being 
chosen. She also fitted an X-Ray room and purchased land 
on St. Charles, near Napoleon Avenue, whereon to build a 
modern hospital, but her plans were not materialized, as 
she was ordered to take charge of a much larger hospital 
in Los Angeles. The patronage of the institution had in- 
creased greatly and the need for a new modern hospital was 
imperatively felt. Sister Emily, who succeeded Sister 
Mary Anne, possessed fine business and administrative 
qualities and lost no time in meeting conditions. For this 
purpose the north wing was demolished and a magnificent 
structure erected on its site with the latest improvements. 
It was begun in 1913 and completed and occupied the fol- 
lowing year. It is an imposing fireproof structure four 
stories high 200 feet long and 50 feet wide, with broad gal- 
leries in front and porches on its outer side thoroughly 
screened and weatherproof., The flooring is of tiling 
throughout, except in the living rooms. The first three 
lloors are for patients, of whom 70 can be accommodated. 
The fourth is the operating floor and maternity service. 
It has five operating rooms, sterilizing, preparatory and re- 
covery rooms, surgeons' dressing room and lavatory, in- 
strument and X-Ray room, with the latest perfected instru- 
ments. It is heated by the Johnson heating system, assur- 
ing a uniform temperature. The air supply of the operat- 
ing rooms is washed and filtered by a mechanical design. 
It is lighted by the Federal signaling and lighting system, 
and is supplied with a telephone system having the central 
office in the main building. 

The following year, 1915, a modern nurses' home was 
erected in brick and concrete three stories high, 160 feet 



220 



♦ 

♦ 

long and 50 feet wide, joining and communicating with the j 

back ends of the wing. Besides bedrooms, lavatories, bath- } 

rooms it contains all requisite accessories as class, recrea- j 

tion, assembly and reading rooms. It has accommodations j 

for 72 pupil nurses, the number at present in the institu- j 

tion. The first floor is used as kitchen, storeroom and ice j 
plant. Separate buildings on a lot back of the institution 
separated from it by Gravier Street, are used for the laun- 
dry and power house supplying the institution with hot and 

sterilized water. The remaining old wing in which the j 

Sisters are domiciled should be torn down and a structure i 

in keeping with the beauty and dignity of the other build- ♦ 

ings erected in its place. It is an offense by comparison ♦ 

artistically and esthetically. I understand a new building I 

is contemplated when funds are available. The institution j 

at present can accommodate 165 patients. Following Sis- } 

ter Theresa and Sister Mary Carrol twenty years Superior, j 

then Sisters Blanche, Raphael, Lucia Felicitas, Mary Anne j 

and Emily, last, but not least, under whose wise administra- j 

tion the institution was modernized and enlarged. The } 

Hotel Dieu has no regular staff, being strictly a private J 

hospital open to all reputable physicians and surgeons. It j 

has a House Surgeon and two internes, medical graduates. | 

Its House Surgeons were in succession Drs. Boyer, G. W. j 



Lewis, Jamison, Reynaud, H. S. Lewis and Marion Souchon. 
The House Surgeon attends the medical and surgical cases 
who have no regular physician, and the internes meet emer- 
gencies in the absence of the attending physician or sur- I 
geon.,There is also a faculty for the Training School of 
about twenty-four physicians. 



221 



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HOSPITALS, SANITARIUMS AND 
CLINICS. 



BELVEDERE PRIVATE SANITARIUM 

Flood Sreet and the River. Phone Hemlock 316. 

Dr. B. F. Gallant, Medical Direcor; Mental and Nervous 

Diseases. 



BROSNAN HOSPITAL FOR THE INJURED. 

City Park Avenue and Bienville. Phone Galvez 379. 

Established 1912 by Dr. D. S. Brosnan, Surgery; 27 beds; 

private. Dr. D. S. Brosnan, Physician in charge. 



BETHANY HOME SANITARIUM. 
1643 North Claiborne Avenue. Phone Hemlock 421. 
Established 1904; private; 30 beds. Dr. John Marcus 
Koelle, Physician in charge. 



CHARITY HOSPITAL. 

Tulane Avenue and Howard. Phone Main 741 and 742. 

Founded in 1736; public. Under Supervision of Sisters of 

Charity. 

MEDICAL STAFF. 
S. W. Stafford, M. D Superintendent. 

M. J. Gelpi, M. D. ) ^ 
J.E.Landry,M.D. f--^"^^^^""^"^°^- 

G. Farrar Patton, M. D Registrar. 

Robt. Bernhard, M. D Medical Officer. 

R. B. Ehlinger, M. D Admitting Physician. 

C. W. Duval, M. D Director Pathological Department 

G. B. Adams, M. D Pathologist 

Rigney D'Aunoy, M. D Assistant Pathologist 

INTERNES. 
G. M. Baker, M. D. J. J. McGuire, M. D. 

L. Blimberg, M. D. H. L. McLaurin M. D. 

V. Cefalu, M. D. B. Manhoff, M. D. 

B. Clay, M. D J. S. Parker, M. D. 



223 



CHARITY HOSPITAL— (Continued). 



W. S. Crawford. M. D. 
R. B. Davis, M. D 
J. E. Dupuy, M. D 
F. C. Hava, M. D 
A. A. Hobbs, M. D. 
Emmet L. Irwin, M. D. 
E. A. D. Jones, M. D 
W. W. Kniymeyer, M. D. 
R. S. Kramer, M. D. 
J. 0. Lowe, M. D. 
S. C. Lyons, M. D. 



E. S. Peterman, M. D. 

A. M. Powe, M. D. 

B. F. Smith, M. D. 
Archie Taylor, M. D. 
A. R. Thomas, M. D. 
R. B. Wallace, M. D. 
R. B. Walker, M. D. 
J. C. Wilson, M. D. 
John C. Winn, M. D. 
I. J. Wolff, M. D. 
W. H. Wynn, M. D. 



Bel, G. S. 
Ledbetter, B. A. 
(in charge) 

Levin, A. L. 
Unsworth, S. B. 
Jamison, S. C. 
Daspit, H. 
Cole, J. C. 

Murphy, P. J. 
Bernhard, R. 
Noha, A. 
Dempsey, J. G. 



Bernhard, R. 
Levin, A. L. 
Unsworth, C. V. 
Daspit, H. 



VISITING STAFF. 
Division of Medicine. 

Chiefs 
Elliott, Jr., J. B. Patton, G. F. 
Halsey, J. T. Moss, E. 

Visiting Doctors 
Jones, H. P. Fossier, A. E. 

Bethea, 0. W. Durel, W. J. 

Lewis, J. L. Daspit, H. 

Cazenavette, L. L. Stubbs, J. G. 
Storck, J. A. Locascio, J. L. 

Asst. Visiting Doctors 



Nicoll, H. T. 
Stulb J. G. 
Genella, L. J. 
Locascio, J. L. 
Gondolf, H. J. 

Clinic Staff 
Jones, H. P. 
Dubos, L. J. 
Eustis, A. C. 
Lewis, J. L. 
Storck, J. A. 



Bamber, J. M. 
Simon, S. K. 

Dugos, L. J. 

Van Studdiford, M. T. 



Mims, G. 
Querens, P. L. 
Lerch, 0. 
Cazenavette, L. L. 



Division of Obstetrics, 
Chiefs 
Kostmayer, H. W Michinard, P. Clark, S. M. D. 

Miller, C. J. 



224 



I CHARITY HOSPITAL (Continued). j 


[ 


Visiting Doctors 




[ Newman, J. W. 


King, E. L. 


Dicks, J. F. j 


) 


Asst. Visiting Doctors 




Cronan, G. A. 


Graffagnino, P. 


Brown, F. T. 


Miller, H. E. 


Gomila, F. R. 






Clinic Staff 






King, E. L. 


• 




Division of Pediatrics. 


, 




Chiefs 




Borey, C. A. 


Bloom, C. J. 


Signorelli, J. j 




Del^uys, L. R. 


1 




Visiting Doctors 


1 


Burt, T. R. 


Canepa, L. 


Strong, R. A. 




De Reyna, G. J. 


1 


. Crawford, Rena 


Voss, R. €. 


Eohne, P. W. 1 




Loeber, M. 


j 




Clinic Staff 


I 


Burt, T. R. 


Canepa, L. 


Bohne, P. W. | 




Strong, R. A. 


1 




Division of the Eye. 


* 




Chiefs 


} 


Dimitry, T. J. 


Feingold, M. 


Whitmire, A. L. ♦ 




Visiting Doctors 


1 


Smith, V. C. 


Blum, H. 


Crebbin, A. R. } 




Asst. Visiting Doctors 


1 




Davis, R. A. 






Clinic Staff 


1 




All 


1 




Division of the Skin. 


i 




Chiefs 


1 

i 


Dyer, I. 


Menage, H. E. 


Roussel, J. N. { 




Clinic Staff 


1 


Dyer 


Menage 


Roussel { 

! 



CHARITY HOSPITAL— (Continued). 



Clark, S. M. D. 
Kohlmann, W. 
Michinard, P. 

Dicks, J. F. 
Walet, E. H. 
Barnett, J. 
Dorrestein, C.A 

Graffagnino, P. 
Jones, W. O'D. 
Gladden, A. H. 
Talbot, P. T. 
Walshe, T. J. 
Levy, W. 
Cronan, G. A. 
Sellers, T. B. 



Division of Gynecology. 

Chiefs 
Miller, C. J. 
Leake, W. W. 
Kostmayer, H.W. 



Guthrie, J. B. 
Ledbetter, B. A. 



Visiting Gynecologists. 
Holderith, C. P. Brown, C. P. 
Cocram, H. S. Salatich, P. B. 

King, E. L. Lemann, I. I. 

M. Friedrichs, E. D. Lyons, R. 

Asst. Visiting Gynecologists. 

Wallbillich, C. A. Barker, W. E. 



Jr. 



Gomila, F. R. 
Brown, F. T. 
Miller, H. E. 
Carter, P. J. 
Hebert, J. S. 
Hauer, G. /. 
Rosenthal, J. 



Ledoux, Lucien. 
Rosenthal, J. M. 
Barker, W. E. 
Heninger B. R. 
Allegeyer, E. E. 
Roeling, G. F 



M. 



Clinic Staff 



Dorrestein, C. A. M Brown, C. P. 
Graffagnino, P. Haer, G. J. 
Brown, F. T. Roeling, G. F. 

King, E. L. 

Division of Surgery 



Holderith, C. P. 
Talbot, P. B. 
Barnett, J. 



Consulting Surgeons 



Dr. Chas. Chassaignac 
Dr. E. S. Lewis 



Eatchelor, J. M. 
Danna, J. A. 
Gessner, H. B. 
Larue, F. A. 

Keller, A. A. 
Richard, E. J. 
Lindner, J. W. 
Henderson, J. A. 
Hountha, J. M. 
Landry, L. H. 



Chiefs 
Martin, E. D. 
Matas, R. 
Parham, F. W. 
Smythe, J. 

Visiting Surgeons. 
Perkins, W. M. 
Leckert, E. L. 
Friedrichs, E. D 
King, A. C. 
Allen, C. W. 
Maes, Urban. 



Gelpi, M. J. 
Cole, G. G. 
Landry, J. E. 
Leidenheimer, H. 

Bradburn, M. 
Bradburn, W. 
Landry, L. A. 
Berge, C. 
Points, J. F. 
Tedesco, I. 



CHARITY HOSPITAL— (Continued). 
Asst. Visiting Surgeons. 

Troescher, W. G. Cassegrain, 0. C Block, Emile 

Upton, G. H. 

Duncan, A. 

Geismar, S. 

Hebert, L. A. 

May, C. P. 



Ellis, J. H. 
Menendez, J. C. 
Hirsch & Tilly 
Perkins, R. T. 



Kirn, T. F. 
Ficklen, E. A. 
Maxwell, T. A. 
Mainegra, R. J. 



Ellis, J. H. 
Beatrous, T. 
Tilly, W. P. 
Aiken,W. 



Clinic Staff 
Upton, G. H. 
Geismar, S. 
Bardburn, M. 



Bardburn, M. 
Hebert, J. S. 
Maxwell, T. A. 
Johnson, F. 



Division of Ear, Nose and Throat 

Chiefs 
Patton, W. T. 
Estopinal, J. A. 

Visiting Doctors 
DePoorter, L. Dunn, J. S. 



Dupuy, H. 
Blackshear, S. M 



Scheppegrell, \V 
(Hay Fever) 

Thiberge, N. F 



Asst. Visiting Doctors 
Boebinger, M. Irwin, J. J. Haspel, i\I. D. 

Sharp, C. H. Fuchs, Val. H. 

Clinic Staff 
All. 



Orthopedics and Surgical Diseases of Children. 
Chiefs 
Wilson, S. G. 
Oechsner, J. F. 

Visiting Orthopedists. 
Logan, G. K. 

Visiting Orthopedists. 
Sims, D. 
Chetta, P. 



Fenner, E. D. 

Mcllhenny, P. A. 
Spencer, L. C. 



Nix, J. T 

Levy, J 
Dauterive, H. J, 



Asst. Visiting Orthopedists, 
Mcllhenny, P. A. Logan, G. K. Levy, J. 



CHARITY HOSPITAL— (Continued). 
Divison of Genito-Urinary Diseases. 
Chiefs 
Delaup, S P. Nelken, A. Walther, H. W. E. 

Hume, J. Gelpi, Paul J. 

Visiting Surgeons. 
Lindner, H. J. Kahle, P. J. 

Asst. Visiting Surgeons. 
Otto, H. J. Mattes, A. 

Clinic Staff 
Oto, H. J. Sauter, C. P. Lindner, H. J. 

Mims, C. Hume, J. 



CITY HOSPITAL FOR MENTAL DISEASES. 

Gravier and Broad Streets. Phone Galvez 32. 

Established 1911; mental; 100 beds; public. Dr. Henry 

Daspit, City Alienist, in charge. 



CONVALESCENT HOME. 
2804 South Carrollton Avenue, corner Apricot. Phone Wal- 
nut 326. 
Established 1889; public; 22 beds. Mr. Robert Parker, 
Superintendent. 



DIAGNOSTIC CLINIC. 
Prytania and Foucher, opposite Touro Infirmary, Phone 

Uptown 4564. 

Dr. T. J. Dimitry, Ophthalmologist and Chairman of 
Board; Dr. Hamilton P. Jones, Internist and Vice-Presi- 
dent ; Dr. Maurice J. Gelpi, Diagnostic Surgeon ; Dr. Walter 
J. Otis, eNurologist and Psychiatrist; B. L. Gore, D. D. S., 
Oral Surgery. 

X-Ray and Clinical Laboratories. 



EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT HOSPITAL. 

Elk Place and Tulane Avenue. Phone Main 347. 

Established 1889; 30 beds; private. Mrs M. E. Cline, 

Matron. 



228 



CHIEFS. 

Dr. Henry Dickson Bruns, Surgeon-in-Chief . 

Dr. R. C. Lynch, 

Surgeon-in-Charge Ear, Nose and Throat Dept. 

Dr. E. A. Robin, Surgeon-in-Charge Eye Dept. 

Consulting Surgeons. 

Edmond Souchon, M. D. R. Matas, M. D. 

F. W. Parham, M. D. E. Denegre Martin, M. D. 

Consulting Physician. 

John B. Elliott, M. D. 

Consulting Dermatologist. 

Isadore Dyer, M. D. 

Visiting Dermatologist, 

H. E. Menage, M. D. 

Visiting Neurologist, 

Henry Daspit, M. D. 

Visiting Internist, 

Chas. L. Eshleman, M. D. 

Pathologist. 

W. H. Seemann, M. D. 

Roentgenologist, 

E. C. Samuel, M. D. 

Assistant Surgeons — Ear, Nose and Throat Department. 

John T. Crebbin^ M. D. Geo. J. Taquino, M. D. 

Clinical Assistants — Ear, Nose and Throat Department. 
T. A. Duggan, M. D. Edward McCarthy, M. D. 

Joe. D. Martin, M. D. 
Assistant Surgeon — Eye Department. 

C. A. Bahn, M. D. 
Clinical Assistants — Eye Department. 
Covington H. Sharp, M. D. 
Resident Surgeons. 
A. B. Cross, M. D. T. B. Wyndham, M. D. 

J. A. Johnson, M. D. L. S. Gaudet, M. D. 



FLINT-GOODRICH HOSPITAL. 

1566 Canal Street, corner Villere. Phone Main 1674. 

Established 1896 by the M. E. Church; for colored patients; 

60 beds; public. 

Dr. T. Restin Heath, Superintendent* 



229 



FRENCH HOSPITAL. 
1821 Orleans, near Roman. Phone Hemlock 130. 
Established 1913; 100 beds; private. 



HOME FOR INCURABLES. 

912 Henry Clay Avenue. Phone Uptown 2492. 

Sisters of Charity in Charge. 



HOTEL DIEU. 

2004 Tulane Avenue and Johnson. Phone Galvez 1300. 

Established 1859; 135 beds; private; under supervision of 

Sisters of Charity. 

Dr. Marion Souchon Surgeon-in-Chief 

Dr. Daniel J. Murphy Resident Physician 

Dr. Lucien A. Fortier Roentgenologist 



ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD HOSPITAL. 

Magnolia, near Julia Streets. Phone Main 2477. 

Established 1913; private; 75 beds; Dr. C. P. Brown, 

House Surgeon. 



ISOLATION HOSPITAL. 

513 N. Rampart Street, near St. Louis. Phone Main 2436. 
Established 1916, by the Board of Health of the City of New 
Orleans, through the efforts of Dr. W. H. Robin ; con- 
tagious diseases; 75 beds; publjc; Mr Charles 
Ball, Superintendent. 

Medical Staff. 

Dr. W. H. Robin President of Board 

Dr. F. R. Gomila Secretary 

Dr. Paul J. Gelpi Chief Urologist 

Dr. W. H. Seemann Bacteriologist 

Dr. G. H. Hauser Bacteriologist 

Dr. Harry Daspit Neurologist 

Dr. J. A. O'Hara Neurologist 

Dr. Chas. Chassaignac Consultant Urologist 

Dr. Marion Lombard Visiting Surgeon 

Dr. J. Moore Soniat Visiting Physician 

Dr. F. R. Gomila Gynecologist 

Dr. W. A. Gillaspie Medical Inspector 



230 



JULIUS WEIS HOME FOR AGED AND INFIRM. 
Foucher and Coliseum Streets. 

Established 1899; private; general; 48 beds; Mr. A. B. Tip- 
ping, Superintendent. 



KINGSLEY HOUSE FREE CLINIC. 

1202 Annunciation Street. Phone Jackson 124. 

Founded in 1919, under the auspices of the Kingsley House 
Management and the Child Welfare Association. 

Medical Staff. 

Dr. Allan Eustis .... General Physical Examination Clinics 11 

Dr. R. C. Lynch Ear, Nose and Throat I 

Dr. George S. Bel Heart and Lungs ♦ 

Dr. William Edler Venereal Diseases ♦ 

Dr. C. Jeff Miller Maternity Service j 

Dr. Isadore Dyer Skin j 

Dr. Haidee Weeks Guthrie. ... Dental Ciu^ics j 

I 

• 

LOUISIANA RETREAT. I 

926 Henry Clay Avenue, corner Camp. { 

Established 1863; private; nervous and mental; 250 beds. { 

Sisters of Charity in charge. Dr. Charles V. i 

Unsworth, Psychiatrist. ♦ 



LYING-IN HOSPITAL. } 

Howard and St. Charles Avenues. Phone Main 2288. { 

Founded and owned by Dr. Jacob W. Newman. Free to ♦ 

deserving poor. • 



NEW ORLEANS DISPENSARY AND HOSPITAL FOR 
WOMEN AND CHILDREN. 

1823 Annunciaton Street, near Felicity. Phone Jackson 439. 

Established 1906; public; free clinic; 35 beds; Dr. E. P. Mc- 

Cormick, Resident Physician ; Miss Fanny Flower, 

R. N. Superintendent. 



♦ 

PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL OF NEW ORLEANS. 
719 Carondelet Street, near Julia. Phones Main 972-9409- 

2188. 
I Established 1909 ; private ; 90 beds ; Mrs. M. Michel, Super- 

♦ intendent of Nurses; Miss E. Wilson, Assistant Super- 

j intendent of Nurses; Mrs. Rebecca Hite Aragon, 

j Night Supervisor; Mrs. A. Sampley, Super- 

j visor of Operating Room; Mrs. W. 

j Young, Anesthetist. 



PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL AND TRAINING SCHOOL 

FOR NURSES. 

122 Howard Street, near Canal. 

Established 1909; general; 25 beds; Dr. J. T. Newman, 

Superintendent ; for colored only. 



' . ST. JOSEPH'S MATERNITY HOSPITAL. 

1507 Magazine Street, corner Race. Phone Jackson 657. 

Established 1858; private; maternity only; St. Vincent 

Infant Asylum in connection ; 20 beds ; Dr. J. S. 

Hebert( Medical Superintendent; Sisters 

of Charity in Charge. 



TOURO INFIRMARY. 
Prytania Street, from Aline to Foucher. 
Established 1854; private; general; 275 beds; Mr. A. B. Tip- 
ping, Superintendent. Uptown 4871. 

Medical Staff. 

Consulting Staff, 
Dr. J. B. Guthrie. Dr. R. C. Lynch. Dr. N. Eisemann. 
Dr. C. W. Duval. Dr. P. L. Reiss. 

Medical Department. 
Dr. J. D. Weis. Dr. C. L. Eshleman, Dr. 0. F Ernst 
Dr. I. I. Lemann. Dr. R. Lyons. Dr J. C. Cole. 

Di*. J. M. Bamber. Dr. B. R. Heninger. 

Digestive Diseases. 
Dr. S. K. Simon. Dr. A. L. Levin. Dr. W. V. Gale. 



232 






TOURO INFIRMARY— (Continued). 
Children's Diseases, 
Dr. L. R. DeBuys. Dr. C. J. Bloom. Dr. M. Loeber. 
Dr. F. J. Kinberger. 

Ear, Nose and Throat Department. 

Dr. C. J. Landfried. Dr. A. I Weil. Dr. W. T. Patton. } 

Dr. S. M. Blackshear. Dr. J. P. Leake. Dr. H. L. Kearney. ♦ 

Dr. W. M. Johnson. 

Eye Diseases, 

Dr. M. Feingold. Dr. H. N. Blum. Dr. A. R. Crebbin. I 

Gynecological Department. 

Dr. W. Kohlmann. Dr. J. Barnett. Dr. L. H. Levy. 
Dr. C. J. Miller. Dr. J. G. Hirsch. Dr. F. T. Brown. 
Dr. J. Conn. Dr. H. S. Cocram. Dr. D. Hyman. 

Dr. C. A. M. Dorrestein. Dr. S. R. Humphries. 

Neurological Department, 

Dr. R. M. Van Wart. Dr. J. A. O'Hara. 

Dr. C. S. Holbrook. Dr. L. V. Lopez. 

Pathology. 
Dr. J. A. Lanford. 

Skin Diseases, 
Dr. J. N. Roussel. Dr. R. A. Oriol. 

X-Ray Department, 
Dr. E. C. Samuel. 
Surgical Department. 
Dr. R. Matas. Dr. U. Maes. Dr. J. W. A. Smith. 

Dr. F. W. Parham. Dr. A. Nelken. Dr. P. G. Lacroix. 
Dr. H. B. Gessner. Dr. I Cohn. Dr. W. A. Reed. 

Dr. R. E. Stone. Dr. C. W. Allen. Dr. M. Gage. 
Dr. L. H. Landry. Dr. E. D. Martin. Dr. A. Gage. 

Obstetrical Department, 
Dr. J. W. Newman. Dr. W. E. Levy. 

Orthopedic Department. 
Dr. E. S. Hatch. Dr. J. T. OTerrall. 

Dr. L. C. Spencer. 



— »«"»4 



233 



TOURO-SHAKESPEARE HOME. 

5700 Danneel Street. Phone Uptown 257. 

Established 1882 ; public ; old folks home ; 185 beds ; Dr. 

Marion Souchon, Visiting Physician; Mr. R. A. Bourk, 

Superintendent. 



UNITED STATES MARINE HOSPITAL. 

Henry Clay Avenue and Tchoupitoulas. Uptown 110. 

Established 1884 ; public ; general ; 75 beds. 

Office, U. S. Customhouse Bldg. Main 86. 



234 



THE LOUISIANA STATE * BOARD OF HEALTH. 



Its History and Work, With a Brief Revieiv of Health Legis- 
lation and Maritime Quarantine in Louisiana. 



By G. FARRAR PATTON, M. D., New Orleans. 

Ex-Secretary Louisiana State Board of Health. \ 

I 

The Louisiana State Board of Health is composed of |' 

I 



seven physicians appointed by the Governor, a quorum of 
three residing in New Orleans, the domicile of the Board, 
while the remaining four are representative medical men ; 

located in other sections of the State. It was organized ; 

under Act No. 192 of 1898 in obedience to Article 296 of 
the new Constitution adopted that year, and in the exercise 
of State functions is the legal successor of the joint State 
and City Board of Health created by Act 336 of 1855, just I 

after the two appalling yellow fever epidemics of 1853 and 
1854. 

Prior to that time, as the records show, there had been I 

first a long period of public apathy in New Orleans as re- j 

gards quarantine and health laws, and later much wrang- ♦ 

ling and confusion. Yellow fever had doubtless prevailed j 

in Louisiana with more or less regularity every season dur- j 

ing the latter years of the eighteenth and the beginning of j 

the nineteenth centuries, but the first authoritative sugges- j 

tion of quarantine for protection against that disease, as | 

far as' known, seems to have been made by Hon. W. C. C. j 

Claiborne, the first American Governor, who in 1810, rec- j 

ommended in his message to the Legislature to ''subject I 

the shipping entering the Mississippi River to those quar- ! 

antine regulations which in other ports had proven salu- 
tary." No action was taken at that time, but certain I 
quarantine laws and regulations were enacted in 1816 and ^ 
1817. That these measures were unpopular is evidenced i 
by the fact that in 1819 the Legislature repealed all ex- ' 
isting quarantine laws and gave the Governor the power 
to declare quarantine at his discretion, which the Governor 
did in June of the same year. • i 

235 



THE FIRST QUARANTINE STATION. 

Yellow fever continued to appear, and in 1821, after two 
epidemics pointing strongly to importation, the Legisla- 
ture enacted a law creating a Board of Health in New Or- 
leans, consisting of twelve members, and provision for a 
quarantine station sixteen miles below the city and deten- 
tion of vessels for ten days. It is probable that some form of 
^'purification" was also practiced. 

The disease appearing with great severity in each of the 
three succeeding years, the Legislature, in 1825, repealed 
all quarantine laws, abolished the Board of Health and or- 
dered the quarantine grounds and buildings sold. With 
present knowledge of yellow fever, and of the conditions 
under which quarantine operations were conducted, it is 
not surprising that such a system should have resulted in 
disaster. 

SIXTEEN YEARS WITHOUT ANY QUARANTINE. 

From 1825 to 1841 the records show no attempt at offi- 
cial control of health matters, but in June of 1841 the mu- 
nicipal government of New Orleans created a City Board of 
Health, composed of three aldermen, three physicians and 
three other citizens. The Board regulated local sanitation, 
but did nothing in the way of maritime quarantine. After 
the two great epidemics of 1853 and 1854 had caused more 
than ten thousand deaths in New Orleans and the parishes, 
public sentiment was aroused to such an extent that all 
opposition to quarantine was swept aside, the portability 
cf yellow fever having been positively demonstrated. 

FOUNDATION OF THE MODERN SYSTEM. 

In March, 1855, the Legislature created a Board of Health 
of nine members, six appointed by the Governor and three 
elected by the Council of New Orleans, founding the system 
of State quarantine and of municipal sanitary work in New 
Orleans. Fifty thousand dollars were appropriated for the 
erection of quarantine buildings and for municipal sanita- 
tion. The president's salary was fixed at $5,000 per an- 
num and the secretary's at $2,000. In 1858 an assistant 
physician was appointed. Provision was made for nurses 
and other employees. Detention of vessels was for a pe- 
riod of ten days when presenting a clean bill of health and 



236 



having no sickness on board and not being in foul condi- 
tion. The ships were permitted to proceed to the city 
after thorough fumigation. 

The quarantine station was located seventy miles by 
river below the city. The former station was only about 
seven miles below New Orleans and in the midst of settle- 
ments. A quarantine station was established on the Rigo- 
lets pass and one on the Atchafalaya River to be operated 
from May 1st to November 1st. In 1888' the quarantine 
station was removed twenty-one miles down the river, set- 
tlements having sprung up near the site designated by the 
law of 1855. 

Carbolic acid as a disinfectant was introduced into san- 
itary work in New Orleans in 1867 and at the quarantine 
station in 1870, until displaced by corrosive sublimate in 
1885. Sulphur fumigation was also practised. With the 
idea that the infection of yellow fever was something that 
clung to fabrics and lurked in remote parts of a vessel's 
hold and in rotten wood, carbolic acid was sprinkled on 
clothing (in diluted form) while for rough work the crude 
product was used. 

In 1870 the Legislature authorized the Board to elect six 
sanitary inspectors for the city and created a special police 
under the direction of the Board and power was given the 
Board to issue warrants for the arrest of persons violating 
the sanitary laws. 

Under pressure by the Chamber of Commerce and of 
prominent citizens, the Legislature, in 1876, enacted a brief 
but fateful law authorizing the Board of Health, at its dis- 
cretion, at any time, to cause the detention at Quarantine 
Station, for purposes of disinfection, fumigation and puri- 
fication of any and all vessels from ports which are usually 
infected with yellow fever, or from ports where other con- 
tagious or infectious diseases were reported to exist. After 
such disinfection, without any prescribed time of detention, 
the vessels shall be permitted to come up to New^ Orleans, 
should the Board of Health decide they can pass without 
damage to the public health. 

In 1877 a law was passed providing for any definite 
number of physicians as members of the State Board of 
Health. The president's salary was reduced to $2,500 a 



237 



♦ 



year. (In July, 1886, the president's salary was raised to 
$5,000.) The law of 1877 made many provisions for mu- 
nicipal sanitation ; authorized the Board to issue marriage 
licenses, and to record marriages, births and deaths. Power 
was given the Board to establish quarantine stations on any 
of the approaches to the city. Another law in 1877 pro- 
vided for the inspection of illuminating oils. 

The Board of Health was reorganized in 1878 with Dr. 
Samuel Choppin as president, a distinguished surgeon, 
who was a firm believer in the efficacy of carbolic acid as a 
germicide. An epidemic in 1878 caused widespread mor- 
tality. With present knowledge of the disease and the evi- 
dent inefficiency of disinfection it is not to be wondered at 
that the scourge proved so fatal in 1878. By way of illus- 
tration it may be mentioned that the first case verified by 
an autopsy in 1878 was that of an engineer on one of the 
regular Havana packets, who reached New Orleans on May 
22nd and did not become ill until the 25th. It was the 
belief at that time that the special infection of yellow fever 
was retained and transmitted by fomites', lurking in textile 
fabrics or in cargoes of vessels. Many of the alleged in- 
stances of infection by fomites can, with a little ingenuity, 
be reconciled with the mosquito theory of transmission. 

In 1879 the Board having satisfied itself by sending a 
commission of inquiry to the Bay Islands, that these islands 
were free from yellow fever, permitted fruit ships to come 
up to New Orleans without detention, provided they had 
not touched any but By Island ports, and had acclimated 
crews and carried no passangers. 

The National Board of Health was created by Act of Con- 
gress in 1879. 

All State officers in Louisiana, from the Governor down, 
except the Treasurer, went out of office in the spring of 
1889. The Board of Health was reorganized with Dr. 
Joseph Jones as president. There were four strenuous 
years (1880-81-82-83) during which the Board met with 
antagonism, ridicule and opposition in its honest endeavors 
to do all in its power to prevent the introduction of yellow 
fever. What added to the irritation of the Board was 
that an inspector from the National Board of Health was 
stationed at the Mississippi Quarantine Station during the 



.— -^ 



J 38 



1 

years 1881-82-83. In the summer of 1880 a rigid system \ 

of non-intercourse with foreign ports was established, and [ 

an inspection station was located at Port Eads to give no- }. 

tice of the arrival of any infected vessel and to prevent, as t 

far as possible, any improper communication between ves~ f 

sels subject to quarantine and persons from the shore, such i 

as runners soliciting business, etc. In 1884 the period of f 

detention was increased to forty days. Under a new Gov- [ 

error, the Board of Health was reorganized in 1884 with } 

four of the previous Board as members. The president, } 

Dr. Joseph Holt, who had been an active officer of the old \ 

Board and who was familiar with every incident and detail « 

of the work, gave in his report thei reason for a quarantine » 

of forty days on vessels from yellow fever ports, whether f 

infected or merely suspected. Dr. Holt was determined ♦ 

to bring forth the most obnoxious features of quarantine as [ 

it was proven that former measures were powerless to pre- | 

vent infection. The president devoted his entire time and | 

energy to convert his numerous opponents into active co- { 

adjutors. He succeeded in having the Legislature appro- { 

priate $30,000 to put into effect his proposed quarantine } 

system. The disinfecting agents were bi-chloride of mer- j 

cury, dry heat (later on moist heat), sulphur fumes. A I 

"lazaretto" for the isolation of infected vessels and cases | 

was established on Passe-a-rOutre, a channel but little I 

used and out of the path of travel. Under this system 
vessels with all on board were, after completion of disin- 
fection, detained five days if from a quarantined port north 
of the equator and three days if from a quarantined port 
south of the equator. Since 1885 the port of New Orleans 
has been open to the commerce of the world. In April of 
1890 Dr. S. R. Oliphant, who had been a member of the 
Board for several years, became president, and remained in 
office until February, 1898. Dr. Olliphant introduced sev- 
eral improvements in the mode of disinfection and fumiga- 
tion. A chemical laboratory was established; the milk in- 
spection service was improved; meat inspectors were ap- 
pointed; a bacteriological laboratory was founded and a 
free depot was opened for the distribution of diphtheria 
antitoxin. 

During the epidemic of 1897 the Board ordered a system 



of house quarantine which utterly failed to check the prog- 
ress of the disease, as it did not prevent infection from mos- 
quitoes. Sulphur fumigation which killed mosquitoes was 
abandoned and formaldehyde was substituted, proving 
worthless, as it failed to destroy mosquitoes. 

A new Board of Health was organized in 1898, with Dr. 
Edmond Souchon as president. He was a prominent sur- 
geon, professor in the Medical Faculty of Tulane Universi- 
ty. During his administration several conferences were 
held with medical representatives of /Health Boards of 
other States, and a resolution was adopted enabling vast 
quantities of freight to be moved by railroads and steam- 
boats despite the prevalence of yellow fever at many locali- 
ties, it having been clearly demonstrated that commercial 
freight is not a medium for conveying infection and that 
people and things from infected places may be allowed to 
enter non-infected localities after proper precautions have 
been taken. 

In the year 1898 the State of Louisiana adopted a new 
Constitution whose Article 296 provided for the creation, 
by the Legislature, of Boards of Health for each parish 
and municipality therein. The law stated that the Gov- 
ernor shall appoint a State Board of Health consisting of 
seven representative physicians from the various' sections 
of the State ; New Orleans to be the domicile of the Board 
and members residing elsewhere to be allowed a per diem 
of ten dollars for attendance at meetings and mileage of 
five cents per mile each way, going and returning. (Later 
an act allowing city members a per diem of ten dollars, but 
no mileage.) The president's salary '^o be $5,000 per 
annum. The law provided for minute details as to the 
duties and powers of the Board. 

Act No. 162 of 1900 provided for the gathering and com- 
piling of vital statistics. 

In compliance with Section 4 of Act 192 of 1898, a mu- 
nicipal Board of Health for the City of New Orleans was 
organized September 6, 1898, with a membership of three 
physicians and two other citizens. Dr. Quitman Kohnke 
was elected Chairman and City Health Officer. In the ex- 
ercise of its functions the City Board of Health is the suc- 
cessor to all powers and duties of a strictly local character 



240 



previously belonging to the joint State and City Board. J 

The City Board issued marriage licenses and burial per- » 

mits, records all certificates and is the custodian of records j 

of marriages', births and deaths. j 

The State Board was required by Act 192 of 1898 to pre- | 

pare a sanitary code for the State of Louisiana which shall { 

contain and provide rules and regulations and ordinances of j 

a general nature for the improvement and amelioration of | 

the hygienic and sanitary condition of the State. | 

There are six quarantine stations, located as follows: j 

The Mississippi River Quarantine Station, ninety miles j 

below New Orleans; the Port Eads station, situated close | 



of that name ; the Lake Borgne Canal Station ; the Atchaf a- 
laya Station, near Morgan City, on the Atchafalaya River, 
close to its mouth; the Calcasieu Pass Station, on the en- 
trance to Calcasieu Lake, in Cameron Parish. 

THE TRANSMISSION OF DISEASE BY MOSQUITOES. 

The State Board of Health, on May 26th, 1903, adopted 
a resolution as follows 

"It having been proven beyond any doubt by the U. S. 
Yellow Fever Commission in Havana that the female ste- 
gomyia fasciata mosquito serves as an intermediary host 
and does convey the poison of yellow fever to non-immunes, 
as the anopheles mosquito has been fully proven as the dis- 
seminator of malaria, from man to man, therefore, the Lou- 
isiana State Board of Health recommends a constant war- 
fare against the mosquito and heartily approves any effort 
in that direction." 

An act was passed in 1900 requiring all physicians and 
midwives to file with their respective parish health officers 
quarterly returns of all births and deaths occurring in their 
practice. Where there is no partish health officer, returns 
must be filed with the coroner. The parish health officer 
is required to make a quarterly return to the secretary of 
the State Board of Health of all births and deaths reported 
to him by individual physicians and midwives, and the sec- 
retary must compile such reports and publish the same in 
the biennial report of the State Board of Health. , 



241 



to the mouth of South Pass ; the Rigolets station, in the pass | 



****1 




MARTIN SANITARIUM 

DONALDSONVILLE. LA. 

Dr. A. W. Martin 

Superintendent 

Dr. D. T. Martin 

House Physician 

Open Day and Night for all Physicians 
and Their Patients. 



Twelve Beds 



242 



THE MEDICAL LAW OF LOUISIANA. 



(Revised to Date.) 
AN ACT 

To regulate the practice of medicine, surgery and midwifery 
in the State of Louisiana; to create State Boards of 
Medical Examiners and provide for the method of ap- 
pointment of members thereof; to prevent the practice 
of medicine, surgery and midwifery by unauthorized 
persons ; to provide for the trial and punishment of vio- 
lators of the provision of this Act by fine and imprison- 
ment, or both; to provide for the enforcement of this 
Act by civil process, through injunction and by penal- 
ties ; to regulate examinations to be held under this Act, 
and to authorize State Boards in certain cases to waive 
said examinations ; to provide for the registry of certifi- 
cates issued under the provisions of this Act, and for 
publication of the list of registered physicians of this 
State, and regulating the effect thereof; to authorize 
said Boards to grant certain powers to the members 
thereof; to regulate the expenditures and revenues of 
said Boards; to authorize said Boards to take proceed- 
ings for the revocation of the permit to practice medi- 
cine or midwifery and to enumerate the grounds on 
w^hich such proceedings may be instituted ; to define the 
practice of medicine in this State ; to provide for ex- . 
emptions from the operation of this Act ; and to provide 
that the prosecution pending under existing law^s on the 
subject matter of the same shall not be affected by the 
passage of this Act. 

Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the 
State of Louisiana, That from and after the promulgation 
of this Act. no person shall practice medicine in any of its 
departments within the State of Louisiana, unless such 
person shall possess the necessary qualifications and re- 
quirem'-iics of this Act. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 



__! 



243 



r*^ 



Section 2. Be it further enacted, etc., That after the 
promulgation of this Act, any person before entering upon 
the practice of medicine in any of its branches shall present 
to one of the Boards of Medical Examiners as herein con- 
stituted, a diploma from a college in good standing, of any 
sect teaching medicine or the healing art, and shall stand 
a satisfactory examination before the Board upon the fol- 
lowing branches, to-wit : Anatomy, Physiology, Chemistry, 
Physical, Diagnosis, Pathology and Bacteriology, Hygiene, 
Surgery, Theory and Practice of Medicine, Materia Med- 
ica. Obstetrics and Gynecology. The person shall also sat- 
isfy the Board that he or she is twenty-one years of age, 
a citizen of the United States, of good moral character, and 
possesses a fair education ; provided, however, that the Board 
may issue a temporary permit to one who has taken out his 
or her first naturalization papers and who has otherwise 
complied with the requirements of this Act. If said di- 
ploma and examination are satisfactory to said Board, they 
shall issue to said person a certificate in accordance with 
the facts. Said Board, how^ever, is authorized at its discre- 
tion, to waive said examination in favor of any applicant 
who shall present to the Board a satisfactory certificate of 
examination from a Board of Medical Examiners of another 
State; provided, how^ever, that said Board created under 
this Act shall have found said certificate of examination 
from a Board of Medical Examiners of another State was 
received on the equivalent of ''Class A College standard 
American Medical Association"; the said Board created 
under this Act to be the sole judge as to the sufficiency of 
all other certificates required. (As amended by Act 54 of 
1918.) .' 

Section 3. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the medical 
examiners herein provided for shall consist of tw^o boards — 
one of physicians and surgeons recommended by the Louisi- 
ana State Medical Society, which Board shall be known as 
the Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners, and one 
of physicians and surgeons recommended by the Hahne- 
Mann Medical Asosciation of Louisiana, which shall be 
known as the Louisiana Homeopathic State Board of Med- 
ical Examiners. There shall be five members of each 
board, and three of whom shall constitute a quorum for all 
purposes, including holding of examinations and granting 



244 



♦ 

♦ 

certificates. All the members of both boards shall be j 

graduate physicians and practitioners. j 

The Board composed of physicians and surgeons recom- | 

mended by the Louisiana State Medical Society shall ex- j 
amine all applicants who propose to practice any other than 
the homeopathic system of medicine, and the Board com- 
posed of physicians' and surgeons recommended by the 
Hahnemann Medical Association of Louisiana shall ex- 
amine all applicants who propose to practice the homeo- 
pathic system of medicine. The certificate of either Board 
shall be conclusive proof of the efficiency of the applicant 
examined by said Board. All examinations held by the 
Boards and the answers of the applicants shall be in writ- 
ing, and shall be kept as records for a period of two years. 

All members of said Boards shall be appointed by the Gov- | 

ernor of the State from lists of names presented by the Lou- j 

isiana State Medical Society and the Hahnemann Medical { 

Association of Louisiana, respectively, and the Governor j 

shall have the right to remove any or all of the members j 

thereof for inefficiency or neglect of duty, and to fill all ! 

vacancies occurring in these boards from names recom- j 

mended by their respective societies, provided that the pres- i 

ent members of each of the State Boards shall continue in ♦ 

office until the end of their present respective terms and I 

until their successors shall have been appointed. ♦ 

Section 4. Be it further enacted, etc., That at the expira- j 

tion of the respective terms of the present members of the ! 

Boards of Medical Examiners under existing laws and | 

thereafter, each members of the Boards of Medical Exam- j 

iners shall be appointed by the Governor for the term of six j 

years. i 

Section 5. Be it further enacted, etc., That all persons j 

beginning the practice of midwifery in this State after the ♦ 

passage of this Act shall appear before the Louisiana State j 

Board of Medical Examiners and submit to such examin- j 

nation in midwifery as the Board shall require, and shall j 

pay to said Board for such examination the sum of $10.00. j 

If .such examination is. satisfactory the Board shall issue a } 
certificate. Fees and methods for the recordation and re- 
newal of certificate shall be as provided by Section 9 of this 
Act. This section does not apply to persons attending in 
"an emergency," a woman in childbirth; such persons in 



245 



the sense of this Act are not considered as practicing mid- 
wifery as a profession. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 
Section 6. Be it further enacted, etc., That each Board 
of Medical Examiners is authorized to select such officers 
and frame and adopt such rules and by-laws as may be nec- 
essary for the efficient operation of such Board. The Lou- 
isiana State Board of Medical Examiners may provide that 
the examination required in Section 5 of said Act, as pre- 
requisite to the practice of midwifery may be conducted by 
one member of said Board of Examiners, and the certificate 
of satisfactory examination, annually renewed, issued by 
such member, shall entitle the holder to be authorized by 
j the President and Secretary of said Board to practice mid- 

I wifery in this State; and may also provide that any mem- 

j ber of said Board may take any affidavit necessary to the 

j issuance of any injunction or other legal process authorized 

j under this Act. Each Board shall have its seal and the 

j President and Secretary of the respective Boards shall be 

j empowered to administer oaths in the taking of testimony 

! upon any matters appertaining to the duties of said Board. 

i (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 7. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the regular 
meetings of the Board shall be held at least twice in each 
year in the City of New Orleans, but a special meeting of 
either Board may be called by the President thereof, any- 
♦ where in the State whenever a majority of such Board, or 

I its President, may deem it expedient; the call to be issued 

I by the Secretary. 

j Section 8. Be it further enacted, etc.. That to prevent 

j delay and inconvenience, one member of a Board of Med- 

j ical Examiners may grant a permit to any applicant after a 

j satisfactory examination, and shall report thereon immedi- 

j ately to the Secretary; such temporary permit shall not 

continue in force longer than until the next regular meeting 
of the Board, and shall in no case be granted in violation of 
any rule of said boards. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 
Section 9. Be it further enacted, etc., That every person 
must, before he or she begins practice in this State, person- 
ally cause his or her certificate, received under this Act, to 
be recorded with the Clerk of the Court of the parish or 
parishes in which he or she desires to practice. The Clerk 
of Court shall make this recordation in a book to be kept 



21G 



for that purpose only, and shall also certify to such recor- 
dation by an endorsement of the certificate, and he shall 
be entitled to a fee of $1.00. Until such recordation is 
made the holder of such certificate shall not exercise any 
of the rights and privileges therein conferred. Every cer- 
tificate issued through this Act shall be renewed annually 
on or before January 1st by the secretary-treasurer of the 
Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners, and any cer- 
tificate not renewed, after unanimous vote by said Board, is 
suspended; which suspension is subject to review by a court 
of competent jurisdiction. Method and cause of revocation 
of certificate are provided for in Section 16 of the amend- 
ed Act. Upon notification from the secretary-treasurer of 
the Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners of such 
suspension or revocation, the said Clerk of Court must can- 
cel said recordation aforesaid. The secretary-treasurer of 
said State Board of Medical Examiners shall be empow- 
ered to charge and collect from legal holders of certificates 
a fee for renewal of certifica-te, said fee not to exceed the 
sum of $2.00, which fee is to be deposited in the general 
fund of the Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners. 
(As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 10. Be it further enacted, etc.. That it shall be 
the duty of the Louisiana State Board of Medical Exam- 
iners to publish annually a list of the names and residence 
of legal holders of official or renewed certificates issued 
under this Act; and such published list shall be received 
in evidence by the courts of this State as proof that the in- 
dividuals named are duly registered as required by law, 
and the said Board may strike from said list the name of 
any person whose certificate may have been suspended or 
revoked as herein provided for. The Secretary of the said 
Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners shall furnish 
the State Board of Health and the Internal Revenue De- 
partment with the names of the successful applicants to 
whom certificates are issued; and also furnish the State 
Board of Health and Internal Revenue Department annually 
a published list. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 11. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the mem- 
bers of said Boards of Medical Examiners shall receive as a 
compensation for their services ten ($10.00) dollars per day 
during their session and, in addition thereto, their hotel 



and traveling expenses by the most direct route to and from 
their respective places of residence, to be paid out of the 
moneys in the treasury of the Boards upon the certificates 
of the president and secretary. The Boards are empov^- 
ered to demand a fee for the issuing of each certificate, not 
to exceed $2.00. The fee for examination shall be $26.00. 
The fee for temporary permits shall be $10.00, to be paid 
into the treasury of the Boards, said fee to be credited to 
the applicant when he applies to the Boards for a perma- 
nent certificate. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 12. Be it further enacted, etc.. That any itiner- 
ant vendor of any drugs, nostrum, ointment or application 
of any kind, intended for the treatment of disease or in- 
jury, or v^^ho may by writing, print or other methods, pro- 
fess to cure or treat disease or deformity by any drug, nos- 
trum, manipulation, or other expedient in this State, shall 
if found guilty, be fined in any sum not less than twenty 
($20.00) dollars and not exceeding one hundred ($100.00) 
dollars for each offense, to be- recovered in an action of debt, 
before any court of competent jurisdiction, or shall be im- 
prisoned for a term of not less than ten (10) days or more 
than thirty days, or both fined and imprisoned. 

Section 13. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the term of 
practice of medicine, surgery, midwifery, as used in this 
Act, is hereby defined to mean holding one's self to the 
public as being engaged within this State in the business of 
diagnosing, treating, curing or relieving any bodily or men- 
tal disease, condition, infirmity, deformity, defect, ailment 
or injury in any human being other than himself, whether 
by the use of any drug, instrument or force, whether phys- 
ical or physic, or of what other nature, or any other agency 
or means; or who shall examine any such person or mate- 
rial from such person for such purpose; wether such 
drug, instrument, force or other agency or means is to bd 
applied or used by the patient or by another person, or be 
for compensation of any kind or be gratuitous; or attending 
a woman in childbirth without the aid of a licensed physi- 
cian to indicate that one is engaged in the business of re- 
cian to indicate that oen is engaged in the business of re- 
fractig or fitting glasses to the human eye. If any person 
(officer, agent, employee or member of any corporation, 
association or partnership), who does not possess or shall 



248 



not have recorded a license to practice medicine, surgery 
or midwifery on human beings within this State, as herein 
above mentioned as constituting the practice of medicine, 
he or she shall be deemed to be practicing medicine without 
complying with the provisions of this Act and in violation 
thereof. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 15. Be it further enacted, etc., That said Lou- j 

isiana State Board of Medical Examiners through its prop- j 

er officer, may cause to issue in any competent court a j 

writ of injunction forbidding and enjoining any person j 

from practicing medicine in any of its departments in this j 

State, until he shall have first obtained the certificate or j 

permit herein provided for and under the provisions of this j 

Act; and said injunction shall not be subject to being re- | 

leased upon bond. | 

In the same suit in which said injunction may be ap- j 

plied for, the said Board, through its president aforesaid, ♦ 

may sue for and demand of the defendand a penalty not to ♦ 

exceed one hundred dollars, and in addition thereto attor- ♦ 

ney's fees not to exceed fifty dollars, besides the costs of ♦ 

court ; judgment for which penalty, attorney's fees and costs ♦ 

may be rendered in the same judgment in which the injunc- j 

tion may be made absolute. j 

The trial of said proceeding by injunction shall be sum- j 

mary, and be tried by the judge without intervention of a j 

jury. j 

Section 15. Be it further enacted, etc., That any person j 

practicing medicine or midwifery in any of its departments j 

in this State without first having obtained the certificates j 

or permit herein provided for or contrary to the provisions } 

of this Act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and { 

upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine of not ! 

less than $50.00 or more than $100.00, or by imprisonment j 

in the parish jail for a period of not less than ten days or ♦ 

more than ninety days, or both fine and imprisonment for ♦ 

each offense. It shall be the duty of the respective District j 

Attorneys to prosecute violators of the provisions of this | 

Act, before any court of competent jurisdiction. The said { 

fine shall be divided equally between the public school fund j 

of the parish in which said offense may have been prosecut- } 

ed and the State Board of Medical Examiners. | 

Section 16. Be it further enacted, etc., That the Louisi- ! 



249 



ana State Board of Medical Examiners shall have the power 
to refuse to grant, or may suspend, any certificate issued 
through this Act for causes hereinafter enumerated or sim- 
ilar reasons'. Said Board shall have the power to institute 
proceedings for the purpose of having the certificate or 
permit held by any person licensed through this Act re- 
voked. The court shall have the power to revoke a cer- 
tificate or permit for the following causes: (1) Conviction 
of a crime; (2) Fraud, deceit or perjury in obtaining a di- 
ploma or certificate; (3) Habitual drunkenness; (4) Hab- 
itual use of morphine, opium, cocaine or other drugs having 
similar effect; (5) Prescribing cocaine, raorphine or other 
habit-forming drugs in other than a legal or legitimate 
manner; (6) Procuring, aiding or abetting in procuring 
an abortion, unless such is done for the relief of a woman 
whose life appears in peril after due consultation with an- 
other licensed physician; (7) Advertising means or medi- 
cine whereby monthly periods can be regulated or re-estab- 
lished; (8) Advertising special ability to treat or cure 
chronic or manifestly incurable disease; (9) Efforts to de- 
ceive or defraud the public; (10) Impersonation of an- 
other licensed practitioner; (11) Incompetence; (12) Hav- 
ing professional connection with or lending one's name to 
an illegal practitioner, or having any professional connec- 
tion with any person convicted under the provision 
of this section; (13) Employing solicitors or subsiding 
agencies, or paying or presenting any person money or any- 
thing of value for the purpose of securing patients; (14) 
Persistent violation of Federal and State law relative to 
control of social diseases; (15) Persons interdicted by due 
process of law ; (16) Violation of any provisions of this Act. 
Any certificate revoked may be reinstated at the discretion 
of the Board. (As amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 17. Be it further enacted, etc., That any practi- 
tioner of medicine, in any of its departments, failing to 
comply with the requirements of this Act, shall not be ex- 
empt from jury or military duty, nor be permitted to col- 
lect any fees or charges for services rendered, nor be al- 
lowed to testify as a medical or surgical expert in any court 
in this State, nor execute any certificates as a physician 
or surgeon, nor to hold any medical office, nor to be recog- 
nized by the State or parish or municipal corporation as a 



27>() 



physician or surgeon; nor shall he be entitled to enjoy any | 

of the privileges, rights or exemptions granted to physicians j 

or surgeons by the laws of this State. 

Section 18. Be it further enacted, etc., That this Act 
shall not apply to any commissioned surgeon of the United 
States Army, Navy, or Public Service, practicing in the 
discharge of his official duties as such; to physicians or 
surgeons of other States or Territories in actual consulta- 
tions with a registered physician of this State. (As 
amended by Act 54 of 1918.) 

Section 19. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the said j 

Boards shall report to the prosecuting officers of the State j 

of Louisiana all persons violating the provisions of this Act. j 

They shall report, annually, to the Governor of this State j 

upon the condition of the practice of medicine in the State, j 

its recommendations for the improvement of the practice, i 

as well as a record of the proceedings of the Board during I 

the year, together with the names of all physicians or sur- i 

geons to whom the said Board shall have issued certificates I 

during the year, in accordance with the provisions of Sec- i 

tion 2 of this Act. j 

Section 20. Be it further enacted, etc., That it shall not j 

be lawful for the said Board of Medical Examiners or any j 

member thereof, in any manner whatever or for any pur- j 

pose, to charge or obligate the State of Louisiana for the j 

payment of any money except as provided in Act 44 of the \ 

Acts of 1882, relative to the publication of registered phy- j 

sicians, etc., and the said Boards shall look alone to the 
revenue derived from the operation of this Act for the com- 
pensation designated in Section 11 of this Act. And if said 
revenue is not sufficient to pay each member in full as per 
Section 11, then the amount thus received shall be prorated 
among the members. But if at the end of the year there 
should be a greater revenue derived than sufficient to de- 
fray the expenses of the Boards at all their sessions for the 
year, as provided by Section 7, such surplus may be used by 
said Boards in such other expenditures as they may deem 
necessary. The said Boards of Medical Examiners shall 
have the right to employ counsel to carry out the provisions 
of this Act, and that the fees of such counsel and the cost 
for all proceedings taken under the provisions of this Act, 
except the criminal prosecutions, shall be payable exclu- 



2.33 



sively out of the revenues, including penalties under the 
provisions of this- Act. 

Section 21. Be it further enacted, etc.. That this lav^ 
shall not apply to the giving of family remedies in cases of 
emergency; or to legally licensed dentists, pharmacists, os- 
teopaths, practicing according to existing lav^s, or to anyone 
attending in an emergency a woman in childbirth ; or to any- 
one serving full time w^ithout salary or professional- fees on 
the resident medical staff of any legally incorporated mu- 
nicipal or State hospital or asylum; nor to prohibit the 
practice of Christian Science or religious rules or ceremo- 
nies as a form of religious worship, devotion or healing, pro- 
vided that the person administering or making use of, or as- 
sisting or prescribing such relief as faith and prayer alone, 
and do not prescribe or administer drugs or medicine nor 
perform surgical or physical operations nor assume the title 
or hold themselves out to be, physicians or surgeons. 
(As amended by Act 54 of 1918'.) 

Section 22. Be it further enacted, etc., That no Acts or 
parts of Acts shall be considered repealed by this Act un- 
less same are contrary to or in conflict with this Act. 

Section 23. Be it further enacted, etc.. That this Act 
shall not apply to offenses committed prior to the adoption 
hereof, but all such offenses shall be prosecuted and pun- 
ished as is now provided by such laws. 

Section 24. Be it further enacted, etc.. That in the event 
that any provision or part of this Act shall be questioned in 
any court and shall be held to be invalid, the remainder of 
this act shall not be invalid but shall remain in full force 
and effect. 

Section 25. Be it further enacted, etc., That this Act 
will take effect from and after the date of its passage. 






LOUISIANA DENTAL LAW. 



Act No. 88, 1900, as Amended by Act 132 of 1902 and 
Act 57 OF 1906. 



AN ACT 

To carry out Article 297 of the Constitution relative to the | 

protection of the people from unqualified practitioners { 

of dentistry; to create the Louisiana State Board of » 

Dentistry ; to confer on said Board all powers necessary i 

for carying out the purposes of this Act; to authorize | 

the members and officers of said Board to administer j 

oaths in certain cases; to impose certain duties upon | 

said Board ; to make it a misdemeanor to practice, or at- | 

tempt to offer to practice, dentistry in this State with- 
out having obtained and recorded a certificate from the 
said Board ; to impose certain duties upon the Secretary 
of the Board of Health in the Parish of Orleans and 
upon the Clerks of Court of the other parishes of the 
State, and authorizing said officers to charge certain 
fees; to require persons, corporations and associations 
to furnish sworn statements, and making the refusal or 
failure to furnish same, and also the use of certain titles 
prima facie evidence of certain facts ; to impose certain 
duties upon District Attorneys, and to repeal all laws 
in conflict with this Act. 

Section 1. Be it enacted by General Assembly of the 
State of Louisiana. That to carry out Article 297 of the 
Constitution, requiring the General Assembly to provide 
for the 'protection of the people from unqualified practi- 
tioners in dentistry; power to sue and be sued; to have a 
seal and a domicile; to adopt by-laws for its own govern- 
ment and regulations for carrying out the provisions and 
purposes of thiy Act; and, generally, with all powers and 
faculties necessary for the effectual carrying out of the 
purposes of this Act. 



253 



Section 2. Be it further enacted, etc., That the said 
Board shall be composed of five members, to be appointed 
as follows: The Governor shall appoint the five mem- 
bers of the Board and fill all vacancies from the pub- 
lished lists of registered dentists in the State. The 
term of office of the members of said Board shall be seven 
years, and until their successors are appointed and quali- 
fied. But the members of the Board of Examining Dent- 
ists, under Acts 32 of 1880 and 32 of 1894, shall constitute 
the first Board under the present act. They shall, however, 
be reappointed by the Governor, one for the term of two 
years, one for the term of three years, one for the term of 
four years, one for the term of five years, and one for the 
term of six years. 

Members of said Board shall qualify by taking the oath 
required of State officers. They, including the President, 
shall receive no pay ; except ten dollars per day for each day 
they are actually engaged on the business of said Board, 
and five cents per mile for each mile necessarily traveled 
in going to and returning from meetings. 

Section 3. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the officers 
of said Board shall be a President, to be chosen from among 
its members, and a Secretary, ex-officio Treasurer, and 
such officers or agents as may be necessary to carry 
out the purposes of said Act ; and that the compensation of 
salary of said officers, including the Secretary, even if the 
latter be a member of the Board, shall be fixed by said 
Board. 

Section 4. Be it further enacted, etc.. That said Board 
shall keep a record of all its acts and proceedings, and of all 
receipts and disbursements of money, and shall make bien- 
nially to the Governor a full report. 

Money accruing to said Board shall be received by the 
Secretary, and be at once deposited in some good and sol- 
vent bank. All payments by said Board shall be made by 
checks signed by the President and by the Secretary, and 
the stub of said checks shall be kept, and each stub shall 
specify what the check corresponding to it was drawn for. 
The records of said Board shall at all times be subject to 
inspection by persons having an interest. The Secretary 



254 



shall give bond in favor of the Governor in the sum of one j 

thousand dollars. j 

Section 5. Be it further enacted, etc., That said Board j 

shall in its by-laws fix the dates for its regular meetings, j 

which shall not be fewer than two yearly; and said Board j 

shall not change said dates except at a regular meeting with j 

all members present. For all other business, three mem- j 

bers shall constitute a quorum. Due notice of all called { 

meetings shall be given to members. The first meeting, j 

for the purpose of organizing, shall be held in New Orleans j 

on the first day of August, 1900. j 

Section 6. Be it further enacted, etc., That the expenses j 

of said Board shall be defrayed out of fees to be exacted j 

from persons, colleges and students applying for certificates ♦ 

and licenses, and out of fines imposed for violations of this ♦ 

Act. ♦ 

Section 7. Be it further enacted, etc., That it shall be j 

unlawful to practice, or attempt to practice, dentistry in j 

this State without having first obtained from the Louisi- j 

ana State Board of Dentistry a certificate of qualification, j 

and having caused said certificate to be duly recorded ; and { 

any person who shall violate the provisions of this section | 

shall, on conviction thereof, be sentenced by any court of { 

competent jurisdiction in the State to pay a fine not ex- i 

ceeding $100, or imprisonment for a term not exceeding ♦ 

three months, or both fine and imprisonment, at the discre- j 

tion of the court ; and any person, or corporation, or associa- j 

tion of any kind, aiding or abetting any person in the vio- | 
lation of this Act, whether present or not when such unlaw- 
ful act is committed, shall be subject, on conviction, to the 
same punishment as provided above. Each and every 
member of such offending corporation or association shall 
answer for such corporation or association as if the unlaw- 
ful act had been the own act of such members. 

Section 8. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the certifi- 
cate referred to in the preceding section shall be recorded in 
the parish where the holder thereof practices, or attempts 
or offers to practice, dentistry ; in the Parish of Orleans, in 
the office of the Secretary of the Board of Health, and in 
the other parishes of the State in the office of the Clerk of 
Court, in books to be kept for that purpose; and it shall be 



the duty of the said Secretary of the Board of Health and 
j of the Clerks of Court to make such recordation, for which 

j they shall be allowed to charge a fee of one dollar, to be 

j paid by the person applying for the registry of the cer- 

} tificate. 

Section 9. Be it further enacted, etc.. That if any officer 
of the law or member of said Board suspects that any per- 
son or corporation, or association of any kind, is violating, 
or has violated, the provisions of this act, such officer or 
I member may make an affidavit, setting forth the' facts and 

I circumstances giving rise to suspicion, and may then call 

I upon such suspected person or corporation, or association, 

I to make to said officer or member of said Board a sworn 

♦ statement, touching the facts and circumstances set forth 

♦ in said affidavit ; and, should the person, corporation or as- 

isociation thus called upon refuse, or fail after a delay of two 
J days to make such sworn statement, the facts set forth in 

j said affidavit as merely suspected shall be taken to be prima 

I facie true ; and, should said facts substantiate a violation of 

I the present act, it shall be the duty of the District Attorney, 

j upon said affidavit being presented to him, together with 

I another affidavit showing such refusal or failure to make 

I sworn statement, to file at once an information based upon 

t said affidavit. 

In the case of corporations and associations, the demand 
for the sworn statement provided for in this section may be 
made upon any person in charge of the laboratory or office 
I or place of business of such corporation or association, and 

I information shall be filed against all persons named in the 

I said affidavit as being members of (sic) or partners or as- 

isociates in, said corporation or association. 
Section 10. Be it further enacted, etc.. That it shall be 
the duty of the Louisiana State Board of Dentistry to pub- 
j lish annually in the official journal of the State (and, if 

♦ there be no such journal, in one of the daily newspapers 

♦ of the City of New Orleans) , a list of the registered practi- 
j tioners of dentistry in the State, and their residences; and 

such published list shall be received in the courts of the 
State as proof that the practitioners of dentistry therein 
named are duly registered as required by law. 

Section 11. Be it further enacted, etc.. That this act 



i-*^ 



256 



shall not apply to practitioners of dentistry already quali- 
fied and registered under Acts 32 of 1880 and 32 of 1894, 
nor to regularly enrolled students of dentistry while prac- 
ticing in the clinic or operating room of dental colleges of 
recognized standing in the State, or to surgeons and physi- 
cians already qualified and registered under Act 49 of 1894. 

Section 12. Be it further enacted, etc.. That said Board 
shall prescribe in its regulations what conditions shall con- 
stitute a good standing for a dental college, and shall issue 
certificates of good standing to colleges fulfilling said con- 
ditions and paying the fees required for a certificate; and 
such certificates shall be irrevocable except by judicial pro- 
ceedings and for cause. 

The amount of fee to be paid for such certificate of good 
standing shall be fixed by said Board in its regulations, and 
shall not be thereafter increased. 

Section 13. Be it further enacted, etc.. That any person 
shall be regarded as practising dentistry within the mean- 
ing of this act who shall use the words ''Doctor of Dental 
Surgery," ''Doctor of Dental Medicine," or the letters "D. 
D. S." or "D. M. D." in connection with his' name, or any 
other title intended to imply him to be a practitioner of 
dentistry in all its branches. 

Section 14. Be it further enacted, etc.. That any mem- 
ber of said Board, or any officer of said Board to whom the 
said Board may delegate the authority, shall be empowered 
to administer oaths in connection with the business of said 
Board and in furtherance of the purposes of this Act. 

Section 15. Be it further enacted, etc., That all laws and 
parts of laws in conflict with this Act are hereby repealed. 

J. Y. Sanders, 

Speaker of the House of Representatives. 

Albert Estopinal, 

Lieutenant Governor and President of the Senate. ♦ 

Received and filed Secretary of State's office, July 3, ♦ 

1900. I 

John T. Michel, | 

Secretary of State. » 



The foregoing act having been submitted to his Excel- } 

lency William W. Heard, Governor of this State, for his ap- 



proval and signature, and the same not having been returned 
to the House in which it originated with his approval and 
signature, or with his objections thereto, within the time 
prescribed by the constitution of this State, the same has 
become a law by limitation. 

John T. Michel, 
Secretary of State. 



2oS 



THE SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY, LOYOLA UNIVERSITY 



By C. Victor Vignes, D. D. S., Dean. 

Loyola University is picturesquely situated at the very 
zenith of the city's most beautiful boulevard. From its 
commanding position it looks out over the Audubon Park 
and from its turrets gives a glimpse of the whole Crescent 

City. -. j 

One of the prettiest of the cluster of college buildings is } 

Marquette Hall, often admired for the academic tone and at- { 

mosphere which seem naturally to cling to this type of archi- | 

tecture. This large central building is the home of the » 

Dental School. ♦ 

Some five years ago, in view of the great change and { 

rapid advancement of the profession of Dentistry, the Lni- | 

versify hastened to meet the demand for modern, up-to-date j 

dentists by opening the Dental Department. From the be- } 

ginning this department has aimed at the highest ideals in } 

education, building up a most efficient course of studies | 

under conscientious professors, and holding to the severest | 

requirements of the most modern and efficient schools of { 

Dentistry in the country. Nothing has been spared to make { 

the different laboratories first class in equipment and effi- I 
ciency, so that now one would have to go far to find better 

facilities in physics, chemistry, biology and bacteriology ! 

and allied sciences which enter so largely into the curricu- i' 

lum of modern dentistry. i> 

Three rooms of the college building are devoted to the 1 

It 



clinic where patients are given the most modern treatment 

under the eyes of a careful demonstrator. The equipment 1 
consists of twenty-five chairs of the latest type, sterilizers, 

laboratories, lockers, etc., all of which are kept spotlessly ' 

clean and shining to insure the best hygienic conditions. !i 

Nature is lavish with light and air, which fill the infirmary ' 
to the intense comfort of the patients. 

Young men and women who have graduated from a four- | 

year high school course, or who have made up the equiva- .{ 

259 



lent fifteen units in an accredited school are admitted to 
the Dental School when they will be graduated after a full 
four years course. All registrations must be made before 
the end of the first week in October. No student can be 
admitted during the course of the year. 

Friends who are interested in the development of dental 
education will be welcomed at the University and the va- 
rious departments of the Dental School will be open for in- 
spection. It will be quite a revelation for many to discover 
what a model school has matured in our midst during the 
short space of five years. 



2G0 



LOUISIANA CHIROPODY LAW. 



AN ACT ; 

To regulate the practice of chiropody, and to provide a l 

penalty for violations of the provisions of this Act. i 

Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the { 

State of Louisiana, That on and after the promulgation of i 

this Act no one shall practice the branch of medicine known { 
as chiropody, as hereinafter defined, unless duly licensed 
so to do by the Board of Medical Examiners of the State of 
Louisiana after examination conducted by such board or a 
committee thereof, which board or committee thereof shall 

have the discretionary power to appoint two members of j 

the Louisiana State Chiropodists' Association when and ♦ 

only when such board or committee thereof is acting as a | 

Board of Examiners of applicants for license to practice | 

chiropody in this State and such two members of the Lou- ; 
isiana State Chiropodists' Association, when so appointed, 
shall constitute and form part of this examining board or 

committee thereof only under such rules and regulations as II 

said board may determine. ]; 

Section 2. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the defini- 
tion of the word chiropody shall for the purpose of this Act 
be held to be the medical, mechanical or surgical treatment 

of the minor ailments of the human foot, such as corns, cal- - 

louses, ingrowing and abnormal nails, and bunions; and be I 

allowed to use such mechanical appliances as may be deemed i 

necessary by the practitioner for the relief or cure of such ; 

ailments, except the correction of deformities, through the || 

use of the knife, amputation of the foot, toes, or the use of ;| 

anesthetics other than local. ; 

Section 3. Be it further enacted, etc.. That on and after \ 

the promulgation of this Act all persons engaged in the j 

practice of chiropody in this State, and every practitioner | 

of chiropody, twenty-one years of age or over, and of good } 

moral character, shall make application for a license before } 

the first day of January, in the year 1917, and those who | 



261 



can prove to the satisfaction of the board that they have 
been engaged in the practice of chiropody in this State six 
months prior to the promulgation of this Act shall, upon 
payment of a fee of ten dollars ($10.00) be licensed without 
examination, and shall receive in testimony thereof a cer- 
tificate signed by the chairman and secretary of said board. 

Application for license shall be made upon blanks fur- 
nished by the board and shall be signed and sv^orn to by the 
applicant. 

All fees received by the board shall semi-annually be paid 
by its secretary into the treasury of the board. 

Section 4. Be it further enacted, etc., That any person 
not entitled to a license, as aforesaid, who shall furnish the 
board with satisfactory proof that he or she is twenty-one 
years of age or over, and of good moral character, and that 
he or she has received a diploma or certificate of graduation 
from a recognized school of chiropody or equivalent institu- 
tion, having a minimum requirement of one year's course 
of at least eight months, shall upon payment of a fee of fif- 
teen dollars ($15.00) be examined, and if found qualified, 
shall be licensed and shall receive in testimony thereof a 
certificate signed by the chairman and secretary of the 
board. 

An applicant who fails to pass an examination satisfac- 
torily to the board, and is therefore refused a license, shall 
ibe entitled within one year after such refusal, to a re- 
examination at a meeting of the board called for the exam- 
I ination of applicants, upon payment of an additional fee of 

• two dollars ($2.00) for each such re-examination; but two 

I such re-examinations shall exhaust his privilege under his 

original application. 

Any person to whom a license certificate is granted un- 
der the provisions of this Act, shall be entitled to designate 
himself as a licensed chiropodist. 

Section 5. Be it further enacted, etc.. That examinations 
shall be in the English language, and shall be written, oral 
or clinical, or a combination of clinical, or a combination of 
two or more of the said methods, as the board may deter- 
mine. 

The examination shall embrace the subjects of anatomy 
and physiology of the foot, diagnosis and treatment, asepsis, 



?62 



therapeutics, and clinical chiropody, but said examinations 
shall be so limited in their scope as to cover only the mini- 
mum requirements for chiropody education as herein pro- 
vided, and shall not be construed to require of the applicant 
a medical or surgical education. , 

Section 6. Be it further emacted, etc., That any person 
who shall unlawfully obtain a license under this Act, wheth- 
er by false or untrue statements in his application to the 
board or by presenting to said board a fraudulent diploma, 
certificate or license, or one fraudulently obtained, shall be 
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and any person not being 
lawfully authorized to practice chiropody in this State and 
licensed as aforesaid, who shall advertise as a chiropodist 
in any form, or hold himself or herself out to the public as a 
chiropodist, shall upon conviction thereof, for each offense, 
be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred nor more 
than five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not less 
than three months nor more than one year, or by both such 
fine and imprisonment. 

Section 7. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the board, 
after hearing, may, by majority vote, revoke any certificate 
issued by it, and cancel the license of any chiropodist who 
has been convicted of violation of the provisions of Section 
6 of this Act. Said board may also, after hearing, by ma- 
jority vote, revoke the certificate and cancel the license of 
any person whom the court records of any State or Ter- 
ritory within the United States show that such person has 
been found guilty of a criminal offense. Said board may 
also, after hearing, by majority vote, revoke the cerrtificate 
and cancel the license of any person whose license was 
granted upon mistake of material fact. 

Section 8. Be it further enacted, etc., That the board 
may, after hearing, refuse to issue a certificate to any per- 
son, or may revoke the certificate and cancel the license of 
any person licensed under the provisions of this Act, who, 
after investigation, shall be found by a majority vote of the 
board, guilty of grossly unprofessional and dishonest con- 
duct. The words ''unprofessional and dishonest conduct" 
shall be held to mean within the provisions of this Act. 

(a) Having professional connection with, or lending 
the use of one's name to an unlicensed chiropodist, or having 



263 



professional connection with any one who has been convict- 
ed in court of any offense whatsoever. 

(b) Being guilty of offenses involving moral turpitude, 
habitual intemperance, or being habitually addicted to the 
use of morphine, opium, cocaine, or other drugs having a 
similar effect, or for using, selling and giving away any 
substance or compound containing alcohol or drugs for 
other than legal and legitimate purposes. 

Section 9. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the board 
shall investigate all complaints of violations/ of Sections 6 
and 8 of this Act and shall report all violations of Section 
6 to the proper prosecuting officers. 

Section 10. Be it further enacted, etc.. That every ner- 
son to whom a license has been issued under this Act, shall 
within one month from the date of receiDt of said license, 
submit the same to the clerk of the court of the parish 
in which the said person has his leo'al residence, or usual 
nlace of business, and shall make oath that he is the person 
designated therein. Uron nayment of a fee of one dollar, 
it shall be the dutv of the clerk to whom such certificate is 
presented- to reofister the name and address of the person 
desio-nated in thp certificate, toe-ether with the date and 
number inscribed thereon : which record shall be open to the 
inspection of the public; and it shall be the further duty of 
the clerk to whom said certificate is presented, to file with 
the board, within one week of such registration, a duplicate 
copy of the record made. 

Section 11. Be it further enacted, etc.. That each mem- 
ber of the board or committee thereof shall receive ten dol- 
lars for every dav actuallv spent in the performance of his 
duties in connection with the provifeions of this Act, and the 
necessarv traveling expenses actually incurred, not exceed- 
ing three cents per mile each way. The said compensation 
and traveling expenses, and any incidental expenses necessa- 
rily incurred by the board or anv member thereof, shalll, if 
approved by the boarH, be paid from the treasury of the 
board, but only from the fees received under the provisions 
of this Act, and paid into the said treasury by the board. 

Section 12. Be it further enacted, etc.. That the word 
"board" wherever used in this Act shall be understood to 
mean the State Board of Medical Examiners of the State 



£04 



of Louisiana, recommended by the Louisiana State Medical 
Society. 

Section 13. Be it further enacted, etc., That this Act 
shall not apply to the commissioned surgical officers of 
the United States army, navy or marine hospital service 
when in the actual performance of their official duties, nor 
to any physician duly registered under the medical laws of 
the State of Louisiana, nor of the practice of a legally 
licensed chiropodist of this State temporarily during the 
latter's absence therefrom upon the written request to the 
board of said licensed chiropodist of this State. 

Section 14. Be it further enacted, etc.. That any act 
or part of act contravening the provisions of this Act be 
and the same is hereby repealed. 

Section 15. Be it further enacted, etc., Hiat on and after 
the promulgation of this Act it shall take effect. 

Hewitt Bouanchaud, 
Speaker of the House of Representatives. 

F'ERNAND MOUTON, 

Lieutenant Governor and President of the Senate. 

Approved: July 5, 1916. ( 

R. G. Pleasant, 

Governor State of Louisiana. 
A true copy: 

James J. Bailey, 

Secretary of State. 



265 




ORLEANS PARISH MEDICAL SOCIETY BUILDING. 



266 



HISTORY OF THE ORLEANS PARISH MEDICAL 
SOCIETY. 

By Charles Chassaignac, M. D., New Orleans. 

The purpose of the Orleans Parish Medical Society are 
chiefly for the advancement of medicine, the establishment 
and maintenance of a library for the improvement of its 
members, and the encouragement of scientific studies. To 
these may be added the cultivation of good fellowship 
among its members and their organization for the greater 
good of the general public as well as of themselves. 

On May 6, 1878, it was permanently organized, with Dr. 
Charles Turpin as its first president. Frequent attempts 
had been made previously to organize the medical profes- 
sion and an independent medical association was at the 
time in existence. However, the continuous life of a med- 
ical society in affiliation with the State and the National 
Association may be traced as far only as the date above 
mentioned. 

For the next nine years the G0c"ety, leading a more or 
less precarious existence, met once a month in a small room 
of the Medical College then on Ccmmon Street. 

In 1887 there was a revival of interest and activity under 
the presidency of Dr. J. P. Davidson. The society was 
holding its meetings at that time by the courtesy of the 
University, in Tulane Hall, located in University Place, 
where now stands the rear of the Tulane Theatre. 

The Medical Library Association, in January, 1890, 
turned over its books and became merged into this society. 
This originated its library, which is now one of over 12,000 
volumes. The same year saw the inauguration of the work 
of this society against the abuse of hospital and clinics by 
the undeserving. 

It was in 1895 that the society occupied its' first real 
home, albeit a rented one, situated at 163 University Place, 
in the building afterwards occupied by the United States 
Public Health Service up to the end of 1918. It was dur- 
ing this same year that the society inaugurated the prac- 



?67 



tice of holding two meetings a month, which has continued 
up to no,v. It must be noted that at this time the average 
attendance at regular meetings was 32, or 23 per cent of 
the membership, comparing not unfavorably with the pres- 
ent proportion. 

Slow but steady progress continued up to the end of the 
century. At the close of the year 1901 the society possessed 
183 members, and its library consisted of 3,412 volumes, the 
New Orleans Polyclinic having in the meantime donated 
its library to the society. This year the society renewed its 
efforts towards the corection of hospital abuse, but again 
without much success. It was during this period also 
that much valuable work was done by the society through 
various committees in an anti-mosquito educational cam- 
paign. 

An important event in the history of the society occurred 
in November, 1904.This was the purchase for $5,000 of the 
lot upon which now stands the domicile of the society. 
With this lot was purchased the old building situated there- 
on which was repaired and used for a habitat up to the time 
of the erection of the present building. An issue of bonds 
was required in order to raise the amount of the purchase 
price. 

The beautiful and convenient building now occupied by 
the society as its headquarters was begun in 1910 and com- 
pleted in 1911. During the time of its erection the society 
enjoyed the hospitality of the New Orleans Polyclinic ( then 
on Tulane Avenue. 

The new home was formally inaugurated with brief but 
interesting ceremonies on March 13. The members then 
totaled 326 and the library had grown almost to its pres- 
ent size or about 8,000 volumes. It was necessary for the 
society, having no endowment or capital, to float a new- 
issue of bonds in order to meet the expense of putting up 
the new building. 

From this time up to 1916 progress, all told, was rather 
slow. What with business conditions generally unsettled, 
the increased financial burden of the society has been hard 
to carry. Extra assessments made upon the members, at 
other times donations received from the same source, have 
enabled the officers barely to make both ends meet, to- 



268 



gether with the assistance furnished by an increased mem- 
bership obtained by the strenuous efforts of the adminis- 
tration whose term expired in 1916. It was realized that 
something more was needed to put the finances on a sound 
basis, to enable the society to breathe freely, to grow and 
expand. Of the many suggestions considered, the one 
seeming most likely to reach the desired end, though not 
without its objections, was the plan for a benefit, which 
was given at the Athenaeum on January 26, 1916, and 
which netted over $5,000 to the society. 

Since 1916 the progress of the society has been brisk, 
and to-day it has nearly 400 active members on its roster. 
The expenses have been great, however, and the library j 

has not been able to keep pace with the times. We are } 

sadly in need of new books and new medical journals, and } 

it is to be hoped that the new administration which takes } 

the reins of office on January 1, 1920, will devise energetic j 

means to make our library of more practical value to the j 

searcher for the views of the exponents of modern medical j 

literature. t 



1888 J. P. Davidson Charles Chaissagnac 



ORLEANS PARISH MEDICAL SOCIETY. j 



PRESIDENTS AND SECRETARIES, 1878-1920. | 

Complied by George Augustin, Ex-Secretary-Librarian. | 

Organization Meeting was held April 27, 1878, and the { 

Charter and By-Laws adopted May 6, 1878. Following | 

are the Presidents and Secretaries to date: i 

♦ 

Year. President. Secretary. | 

1878 C. C. Turpin A. B. Miles j 

1879 S. S. Herrick A. B. Miles | 

1880 S. S. Herrick F. W. Parham j 

1881 J. P. Davidson P. B. McCutcheon i 

1882 C.J. Bickham P. B. McCutcheon | 

1883 P. B. McCutcheon J. H. Bemiss I 

1884 G. B. Lawrason. J. H. Bemiss ♦ 

1885 Rudolph Matas Wm. Wunderlich I 

1886 Felix Fomento E. W. Jones j 

1887 J. P. Davidson Charles Chassaignac ♦ 



2G9 



♦ 

♦ 1889 J. P. Davidson Charles Chassaignac 

♦ 1890 Charles Chassaignac. . . .M. J. Magruder 

♦ 1891 .Charles Chassaignac. . . .M. J. Magruder 

} 1892 Charles Chassaignac. . . .M. J. Magruder 

I 1893 A. W. DeRoaldes Augustus McShane 

j 1894 E. M. Dupaquier Augustus McShane 

I 1895 F. W. Parham Augustus McShane 

I 1896 Edmond Souchon H. B. Gessner 

{ 1897 John Callan C. Jeff Miller 

{ 1898 John Callan C. Jeff Miller 

I 1899 Isidore Dyer Hamilton P. Jones 

I 1900 T. S. Dabney E. H. Walet 

I 1901 E. Denegre Martin. .William M. Perkins 

♦ 1902 Hermann B. Gessner . Isaac Ivan Lemann 

I 1903 Edv^in J. Graner S. M. D. Clark 

I 1904 M. J. Magruder S. M. D. Clark 

I 1905 L. G. LeBeuf Allan Eustis { 

♦ 1906 C. Jeff Miller Amedee Granger j 

} 1907 John J. Archinard Amedee Granger j 

♦ 1908 Amedee Granger E. M. Hummel | 

I 1909 William H. Seeman C. P. Holderith } 

J 1910 B. A. Ledbetter C. P. Holderith | 

I 1911 B. A. Ledbetter C. P. Holderith j 

I 1912 E. H. Walet M. Thomas Lanaux j 

I 1913 Homer Dupuy W. D. Phillips j 

} 1914 Charles N. Chavigny. . .Edward L. King | 

1 1915 W. H. Knolle Paul T. Talbot I 

I 1916 W. H. Knolle Charles A. Bahn I 

I 1917 Paul J. Gelpi Paul T. Talbot | 

I 1918 Paul J. Gelpi Paul T. Talbot 

I 1919 H. E. Bernadas L. H. Landry 

I 1920 H. E. Bernadas E. A. Ficklen 



4 



Ji 



LOUISIANA STATE MEDICAL SOCIETY. 

Presidents and Secretaries, 1878-1920, and Places 
Where Annual Meetings Were Held. 

Compiled by George Augustin, Ex-Secretary-Librarian 
Orleans Parish Medical Society. 



Year. 

1878. 
1879. 
1880. 
1881. 
1882. 

1883. 
1884. 
1885 . 
1886. 
1887. 
1888- 
1889. 
1890. 

1891. 
1892. 
1893. 
1894. 
1895. 
1896. 
1897. 

1898. 

1899. 

1900. 

.1901. 

1902 

1903, 

1904. 

1905, 

1906. 

1907. 

1908. 



President. 
J. C. Egan. . 
J. W. Dupre. 
C. M. Smith. 
A. A. Lyon. . 
A. A. Lyon . . 



.J. P. Davidson 

.R. H. Day 

. Samuel Logan 

.D. R. Fox 

. Joseph Jones . 
-J. Newton .... 
.C. D. Owens. . 
.C. D. Owens. . 



J. B. Elliott, Sr 
J. B. Elliott, Sr 
A. B. Miles. .. 
Rudolph Matas 
R. M. Littell.. 
P. E. Michinard 
P. E. Michinard 



.G. A. B. Hays.... 

.W. G. Owen 

.F. W. Parham. . . . 
.T. E. Schumpert. . 

. Isadore Dyer 

.J. M. Barrier 

.Chas. Chassaignac. 

.C. D. Ducote 

.H. D. Bruns.... . . 

. Oscar Dowling. . . . 

.E. Denegre Martin 



S€?cretary. Meeting Place. 

.Thomas Layton. . .New Orleans 
. Thomas Layton . . . New Orleans 
. L. F. Salomon .... New Orleans 
. L. F. Salomon .... New Orleans 
.L. F. Salomon.. No meeting on 

account of crevasses 
. P. B. McCutcheon. . . Shreveport 
.P. B. McCutcheon . Baton Rouge 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
. P. . McCutcheon. . . . New Iberia 
.P. B. McCutcheon. . .Alexandria 

. P. B. McCutcheon Monroe 

• P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
. P. B. McCutcheon.No meeting on 

acocunt of crevasses 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
. P. B. McCutcheon.No meerting on 

account of crevasses 
.P. B. McCutcheon . New Orleans 
. H. B. Gessner. . . .New Orleans 
.H. B. Gessner. . . .New Orleans 
.H. B. Gessner .... New Orleans 
. Wm. M. Perkins .... Shreveport 
.Wm. M. Perkins. .New Orleans 

.1. I. Lemann New Orleans 

. P. L. Thibaut New Orleans 

. P. L. Thibaut New Orleans 

. P. L. Thibaut New Orleans 

.E. M. Hummel Alexandria 



271 



.E. M 



..J. 
..J. 
..J. 
. .L. 
. .L. 



1909. .Charles McVea.. 

1910. .Edwin J. Graner 

1911. .R. 0. Simmons. 

1912. .B. A. Ledbetter. 

1913. .Fred J. Mayer. . 

1914. .George S. Bel.. . 

1915. .J. C. Willis 

1916.. Wm. H. Seemann 

1917. .Clarence Pierson 

1918. .W. H. Knolle. .. 

1919. .E. Lee Henry. . 
The next Annual Meeting of 

ical Society will be held at New 
1920. 



.L. R. 
.L. R. 
.L. R. 
.Paul 
.E. W 



. Hummel .... New Orleans 

Martin New Orleans 

Martin Shreveport 

Martin New Orleans 

DeBuys Baton Rouge 

DeBuys New Orleans 

DeBuys Lake Charles 

DeBuys i\ew Orleans 

DeBuys New Orleans 

T. Talbot New Orleans 

. Mahler Shreveport 

the Louisiana State Med- 
Orleans April 24 and 26, 



♦ 
♦ 

I 

THE NEW ORLEANS POLYCLINIC. | 



Graduate School of Medicine of the Tulane 
University of Louisiana. 



By Charles Chassaignac, M. D., Dean, New Orleans. ♦ 

The Graduate School of Medicine of Tulane University j 

was first organized in 1888 as the New Orleans Polyclinic, | 

and continued as an independent institution up to 1906. In i 

that year, by the action of the Board of Trustees of the « 

University, it became a department of Tulane, consequently » 

it is now over thirty-one years" old, while this is the thir- ♦ 

teenth year that it has formed a part of the great Southern j 

University. } 

Since its establishment there have been over three thou- } 

sand physicians in attendance at the Polyclinic and the ses- } 

sions from being of only ten weeks duration at the begin- j 

ning have been gradually extended until now they are held } 

during nearly nine months of the year, i. e., from the end { 

of September to the early part of June. } 

The course of instruction is intended, as the name of the j 

school indicates, only for legal practitioners of medicine, j 

and physicians from nearly all States of the Union have at- j 

tended at different times, while the Polyclinic has had ma- j 

triculates from Central and South America, Canada, Alaska, { 

China and South Africa. I 

No degrees are conferred by this school, but a certificate I 

of attendance is awarded for the branches studied, specifj^- ♦ 

ing the length of time during which these studies are fol- ♦ 

lowed. ♦ 

The courses are arranged so as to enable the physicians J 

in attendance either to take up a general rerview in medicine j 

or surgery, or to limit themselves to the branches in which J 
thej^ are specially interested, thus facilitating even those 
who desire to specialize or limit their practice in a given 
line. 

Instruction is given in the following branches by the Pro- { 

fessors named: { 

^ • 



CHARLES LOUIS CHASSAIGNAC, M. D., Dean and Pro- 
fessor of Genito-Urinary and Rectal Diseases. 

PAUL MICHINARD, M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and 
Gynecology. 

GEORGE FARRAR PATTON, M. D., Professor of the Prac 
tice of Medicine. 

EDMUND DENEGRE MARTIN, M. D., Professor of Gen- 
eral and Abdominal Surgery. 

JACOB ABRMSOE STORCK, M. Ph., M. D., Professor of 
Diseases of the Digestive System. 

FELIX AMBROSE LARUE, A. M., M. D., Professor of 
Operative and Clinical Surgery. 

HENRY SULA COCRAM, B. Sc, M. D., Professor of Gyn- 
ecology and Obstetrics. 

ERNEST ALEXIS ROBIN, B. Sci., M. D., Professor of Dis- 
eases of the Eye. 

JOHN FREDERICK OECHSNER, M. D., Professor Ortho- 
pedics and Surgical Diseases of Children. 

SIDNEY PHILIP DELAUP, B. Sc, ,M. D., Professor of 
Surgery of the Genito-Urinary Organs and Rectum. 

HENRY EDWARD MENAGE, M. D., M. Ph., Professor 
Diseases of the Skin. 

WILLIAM MARTIN PERKINS, B. S., M. D., Professor of 
Clinical Surgery. 

ROBERT CLYDE LYNCH, M. D., Professor Diseases of 
the Ear. Nose and Throat. 

JOHN TAYLOR HALSEY, M. D., Professor of Clinical 
Therapeutics. 

GEORGE SAM BEL, M. D., Professor of Internal Medi- 
cine. 

CHARLES CASSEDY BASS, M. D., Professor of Experi- 
mental Medicine and Director of the Laboratory of 
Clinical Medicine. 

FEREERIK WILLIAM PARHAM, M. D., Professor of 
General and Abdominal Surgery. 

ALLAS CHITAR EUSTIS, M. D., Professor of Dietetics 
and Nutrition. 

WILLIAM DAVID PHILLIPS, M. D., Professor Operative 
Gynecology and the Cadaver. 



274 



LIONEL LOUIS CAZENAVETTE, M. D., Professor of 
Diseases of the Nervous System. 

AMEDEE GRANGER, M. D., Professor of Radiology. 

WALLACE JOSEPH DUREL, M. D., Professor of Phthisi- 
ology. 

PAUL JOSEPH GELPI, A. M., M. D., Professor of Genito- 
Urinary Diseases and Cystoscopy. 

WILLIAM HERBERT HARRIS, M. D., Professor of Pa- 
thology. 

C. JEFFERSON MILLER, M. D., Professor Abdominal 
Surgery. 

ALBERT EMILE FOSSIER, A. M., M. D., Professor of 
Medical Diagnosis. 

JAMES LEON LEWIS, M. D., Professor of Physical Diag- I 

nosis. j 

CHARLES J. BLOOM, M. D., Professor of Diseases of j 

Children. j 

JOHN THOMSON CREBBIN, M. D., Assistant Professor 

of Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. I 

RANDOLPH LYONS, M. D., Assistant Professor of Prac- | 

tice of Medicine. j 

FRANK RAYMOND GOMILA, M. D., Assistant Pro- 
fessor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 

HENRY DASPIT, M. D., Assistant Professor of Diseases of 

the Nervous System. 
JAMES CLIFTON COLE, M. D., Assistant Professor in 

Clinical Laboratory Diagnosis. 

ELIZABETH BASS, M. D., Assistant Professor in Clinical 
Laboratory Diagnosis. 

CARROLL WOOLSEY ALLEN, M. D., Assistant Professor 
of Clinical Anesthesia. 

C. A. WALLBILLICH, M. D., Assistant Professor of Gyne- 
cology and Obstetrics. 

A. C. KING, M. D., Assistant Professor in General and Ab- 
dominal Surgery. 

JEROME LANDRY, M. D., Assistant Professor of Opera- 
tive Surgery. 

CHARLES A. BAHN, M. D., Assistant Professor of Dis- 
eases of the Eye. , 



275 



All instruction is entirely practical and the greater part 
of it is given at the bedside or in outdoor clinics. In addi- 
tion to the Hutchinson Memorial in which laboratory and 
cadaveric work is done, as well as some didactic teaching, 
the wards and clinics of the great Charity Hospital and of 
the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hospital are utilized by the 
members of the faculty, all of whom are connected with 
one or the other of these well equipped hospitals where ma- 
terial is available to a large extent. 

Lectures, clinics and laboratory work take place daily, 
except Sundays, from early morning until late in the after- 
noon, and physicians in attendance can utilize their entire 
time; luring many of the hours they may even have their 
choice between lectures or clinics of several different pro- 
fessors in various lines. 

About thirty among the younger and most progressive 
physicians of this city act as assistants to the profressors 
and lecturers, and in that manner increase the advantages 
to be derived by the matriculates of the school. 

Doctors from all parts of the United States are found in 
attendance at the Polyclinic. Of course, the majority come 
from the surrounding States, but the number coming from 
the North and Northwest is steadily increasing as the ad- 
vantages available here are more generally known and as it 
is better realized by the physicians from the cold sections 
that it is far pleasanter for them to be here in the winter 
and that they can combine recreation with fruitful study in 
a region which gives them rest from their rigorous climate. 



276 



IN PREPARATION 

The 1921 Edition 



FOR BLANKS AND DETAILED INFORMATION 
ADDRESS 

GEORGE AUGUSTIN 

PUBLISHER 

1216 Maison Blanche Bldg. 
Phone: Main 5214 NEW ORLEANS 



OF ! 






Augustin s 
Medical and Dental 

♦ 

Directory | 

i 

This Will Include the Whole State of | 

LOUISIANA } 



277 






The Latest and Best Offers on all 

Important Magazines 



Leading 1920 Oj^ers 



CLUB PRICE 



Youth's Companion $2.50 

McCaU's Magazine 



Pictorial Review $2.00 ) 

Modern Priscllla 1.50 S 

*American Magazine $2.00 / 

2.00 \ 



S:( $2.95 



$3.00 



* Woman's Home Companion. 
*Both to one address. 



Metropolitan 

Popular Science Monthly 



$3.00 
2.00 



Scribner's (with Roosevelt's Letters) . .$4.00 
Review of Reviews 4.00 

Woman's Home Companion. .. .$2.00 a year 

The American Magazine 2,00 a year 

Collier's Weekly 2.50 a year 

ALL THREE 

To one address 

(YOU SAVE $1.50) 

Scribner's Magazine (with Roosevelt's 

Letters) $4.'00 

^Country Life 5.00 

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*These two must go to one address. 

Scribner's Magazine (with Roosevelt's 

Letters) ■ $4.00 

Century 4.00 

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$3.00 

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All Three - Only 

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SEND ORDERS TO 



ugustin Book ^g^ncy 

1216 ^aison Blanche ^Idg. V^ew Orleans, La, 



LOUISIANA NURSES BOARD OF EXAMINERS. 
By JOHN T. CREBBIN, M. D., New Orleans. 



Act 138, creating the Louisiana Nurses Board of j 

Examiners, was passed by the Louisiana Assembly in 1912. j 

In the natural order of progress, it was essential that j 

the nursing profession should keep abrease with the medi- j 

cal profession, so it became necessary that a bill creating a } 

Board of Examiners should be passed. } 

The selection of the personnel of the Board is made j 

by the Governor from a list of physicians recommended by j 

the Louisiana State Nurses Association, and it is composed | 

of five physicians, who must have had not less than five | 

years experience in the practice of medicine. At present | 

the members are : Dr. John T. Crebbin, Dr. Joseph S. He- | 

bert. Dr. George S. Brown, Dr. Charles A. Bahn, and Dr. F. | 

J. Frater. 

The function of the Board is to regulate the pratice of 
nursing, and to see that the profession and the laity are 
protected against unscrupulous men or women, who pose 
as registered nurses ; to register all nurses who had gradua- 
ted prior to June 1915, under waiver; to conduct semi-an- 
nual examinations of all graduates from recognized schools 
of training; to arrange and enter reciprocal relationship 
with other Boards of Examiners, having similar standards ; 
to inspect all training schools and hospitals so as to see that 
hospitals are properly equipped for the care of the sick, 
and that the training schools and nurses' homes are furn- 
ished properly, and that they have proper facilities for 
teaching the nurses in training; also to grade all training 
schools. I 

The duties also require that they shall see to the proper 
fulfilment of this Act. They are authorized to bring suit 
against any person violating any provision of same. 

Since the creation of this Board, fourteen hundred and 
twenty-eight nurses have been registered to follow their 
vocation in Louisiana. 

This Board is recognized as one of the most progres- 



m m » i'^ 



279 



sive Boards in the country, the proof being tha it has enter- 
ed into reciprocity with the following states: Alabama, 
Arkansas, California, Colorado, Deleware, District of 
Columbia, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Ken- 
tucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, 
Nebraska, New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Oklahoma, Pennsyl- 
vania, Texas, Virgina. It is impossible to have this rela- 
tionship with all Boards owing to the laws of some states, 
which do not provide for same. 

The Board and the Louisiana State Nurses Association 
are working with the object of ultimately having compul- 
sory registration of all who are nursing in any capacity, in 
order to further protect the medical and the nursing pro- 
fession, as well as the laity. 



REGISTERED TRAINED NURSES. 



It was our intention of publishing a complete roster of the 
Registered Trained Nrses of New Orleans, with name of in- 
stitution where they graduated, telephone nnmber, etc., but 
we have failed to get the co-operation of this body, and 
regret to have to omit this department from our 1920 Direc- 
tory. Only a few nurses answered our repeated requests for 
information, our stationery and postage being wasted on the 
balance. 

To the few who furnished us the desired information, we 
♦ extend our heartfelt thanks for their courtesy. 



PUBLISHERS AUGUSTIN DIRECTORY. 



J so 



HISTORY OF THE INVENTION OF THE STETHO- 
SCOPE—FROM A CHILD'S TOY. 



Just one hundred years ago Rene Theophile Hyacinthe 
Laennec, one of the pioneers of modern medicine, observ- 
ing some children playing in the gardens of the Louvre, 
listening to the transmission of sounds along pieces of 
wood, conceived the idea of utilizing this method for listen- 
ing to breath sounds in examining a patient's lungs. He 
went home, fashioned a tube by rolling up some glued pa- 
per and then experimented with this in his ward at the 
Neckar Hospital. From this incident in the garden dates 
the modern ''stethoscope," an instrument well night indis- 
pensable in the modern practice of medicine. I 

The early stethoscopes contrived by Laennec were un- I 

like those generally in use in this country at the present ♦ 

time, for they were constructed to be used by one ear only. ♦ 

Nevertheless the original Laennec type is still widely used | 

in European countries. To us, who are accustomed to the j 

scrupulous cleanliness of everything about the modern hos- j 

pital it is curious indeed to learn that the filthy condition j 

of the patients in the hospitals in Laennec's time made it j 

repugant to physicians to listen to the rounds in the lungs } 

by placing the ear directly on the chest of the patient. | 

Laennec gave his invention the name by which the device | 

is still knowTi, deriving the word stethoscope from two | 

Greek roots, one meaning the ''chest" and the other "to ob- j 

serve" or "regard." } 

In using the stethoscope the instrument should be placed | 

on the bare chest wall. For this reason a satisfactory ex- j 

amination of the lungs can only be m?.de when the patient j 

is stripped to the waist. Careless phyfcicians sometimes ♦ 

attempt to examine a patient's chest through the clothing. ♦ 

Such an examination is worthless. If you want reliable ♦ 

information concerning the condition of your lungs, do not ♦ 

go to a doctor who attempts such careless work. It is time ♦ 

and money wasted. ♦ 

Dr. Laennec was born at Quimper, in Brittany, on Feb- [ 

ruary 17, 1781, growing to manhood during some of the j 

most troublous years in the history of France. He studied j 

medicine at Paris, receiving his degree of doctor in 1804. } 

He died on August 13th, 1826, at the early age of 45, in the j 

quaint old town in Brittany, in which he first saw the light. j 



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111 3.00 

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284 



c. 



I 
I 
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California Eclectic Medical Journal, Los Angeles, 

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D. 



G. 



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Canadian Journal of Medicine and Surgery, Toronto, 

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J. 

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286 



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287 



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i 

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280 



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Rush Medical College, Bulletin, Chicago, 111 1 . 00 

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Southern Medical Journal, Birmingham, Ala 3 . 00 

Southern Practitioner, Nashville, Ky 1 . 00 

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290 



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NEW ORLEANS 

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AND 

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REGULATIONS 



307 



NEW ORLEANS HIGHWAYS AND BY-WAYS. 

An Analytical and Historical Sketch. 
By GEORGE AUGUSTIN. 

Why Neiu Orleans Streets Are Crooked. 

New Orleans is irrefutably the most unique, interesting 
and picturesque spot on the American Continent. Famous 
in song and story since the days 'Sieur Jean Baptiste Le 
Moyne de Bienville discovered the camps of the Tchou- 
tchouma Indians near what is now known as Metairie Ridge 
(in 1718) and chose the ground between Bayou St. John 
and the Mississippi river as the site of the future city, this 
grand old Southern Metropolic has successfully fought 
against tremendous odds, until to-day it occupies a foremost 
position in the commercial marts of the world and stands 
unrivaled among the great ports of these glorious and in- 
vincible United States of America. 

In compiling this ''Condensed Reference Street Guide of 
New Orleans," I have departed from the hackneyed custom 
of bunching the streets indiscriminately and have divided 
the information into "Uptown" and "Downtown," with the 
cross streets in their proper districts. In this way, should 
a person desire to go from one section of the city to the 
other and wishes to know between what streets a cer- 
tain number is, all he has to do is to refer to either "Up- 
town" or "Downtown" and he has the information in a 
second. . 

The streets of New Orleans are geometrically unlike 
those of any other city in America, and it is in most cases 
impossible to tell how far a certain locality is from another 
by simply comparing the comer numbers. This was the 
principal stumbling block in the adoption of the decimal 
system. As it is, some decimals run two or three blocks 
on a stretch, while in other cases decimals are skipped and 
a certain intersection may be "400" and the next "600" or 



308 



■ »»»«» 



*700." For example, St. Charles avenue, at Napoleon 
avenue, is '4400." In the natural order of things, this 
would mean exactly forty-four blocks from the starting 
point of the street (Canal street), but count the intersec- 
tions one by one from Canal to Napoleon, and it will be seen 
that the number is fifty-one, a difference of eleven numer- 
als. Funny, isn't it? But it is nevertheless true, and the 
old adage ''figures never lie" looks as if it had received a 
bewildering blow. This state of affairs is directly due to 
the following complex problems which confronted our fore- 
fathers : 

The original site of the city, which included the territory 
now bounded by Canal, North Rampart, Esplanade avenue 
and the Mississippi river, was laid out like a checkerboard | 

by 'Sieur Le Blond de la Tour, Knight of St. Louis and Mili- { 

tary Engineer to His Majesty, Louis XV of France. This { 

was in 1720, two years after Bienville's landing. Almost a { 

century passed without any noticeable change. The prog- | 

ress of the city was slow, due to annual inundations from | 

the Mississippi river, inroads by the Indians and pestilence. ! 

In 1803, the little settlement, which consisted of about > 

3,000 souls, was thrilled by the announcement that the ♦ 

entire Empire of Louisiana, stretching to the Northwest ♦ 

from the mouth of the Mississippi to the Pacific Ocean, had ♦ 

been sold by Napoleon Bonaparte to the United States of ♦ 

America for a paltry $15,000,000. Chagrin, resentment j 

and almost open rebellion surged in the hearts of the colo- | 

nists. "We have been sold like so many sheep," they pro- } 

tested; "take us back again to your bosom, unpatriotic and { 

ungrateful France." But Napoleon needed money to carry { 

on the war against the balance of the European powers | 

I 



arrayed against him— and $15,000,000 was too tempting a 
bait to be disdained. His dream of Western Empire, with 
New Orleans as the brilliant capital, was immolated on the I 

altar of ambition. By a stroke of the pen in the Sala \ 

Capitula of the Cabildo, the Fleur-de-Lys was supplanted \ 

by the Stars and Stripes in the Place d'Armes, and the 
Americanization of the recalcitrant dwellers of the Prov- 
ince of Louisiana was made a matter of compulsion. 

And, verily, Thomas Jefferson made a good bargain, for 
out of the newly-acquired territory, fourteen States were 
eventually carved ! 



309 



The ''Louisiana Purchase," as this great real estate deal 
is styled by historians, proved a Godsend to New Orleans. 
The sommolence of the struggling village was broken. The 
sturdy and progressive pioneers of the North and East, at- 
tracted by the rich alluvial lands of Southern Louisiana, 
began to come to New Orleans, and in 1824, the "Ameri- 
cans," as the newcomers were styled by the natives, began 
to develop that part of the city above Canal street, known 
as the ''Bienville Plantation." The proud Creoles, consist- 
ing of the descendants of the original French and Spanish 
colonists, looked askance at the ruddy-faced strangers. 
They were received with frigid politeness and made to 
understand from the beginning that indiscriminate frater- 
nization was out of the question. This was followed by the 
establishment of two communities within the limits of New 
Orleans, the uptown section being designated as "Quartier 
Americain" (American Quarter), and the downtown dis- 
tricts as "Quartier Creole" (Creole Quarter). These names 
w^ere in common usage up to very recent years. Now, how- 
ever, with the trampling down of traditional axioms under 
the hoofs of progress, one refers to the two sections as 
"Uptown" or "Downtown." The haughty barriers erected 
by our ancestors have been demolished and the blonde 
"Americain" and olive-skinned "Creole" aristocrat of 
old have been succeeded by a composite race which still re- 
tains two of the original characteristics of both — the pro- 
gressiveness of the Northerner and the love of pleasure of 
the Latin race. And it makes a pretty good blend. 

But let us return to our mutton, as the great Shakespeare 
used to say, when he wandered from his original subject. 

In 1824, the pioneers of the "Quartier Americain" began 
to exploit the section above Canal street. About the same 
time, the residents of the original city, not wishing to 
mingle with the "foreigners," began developing in the oppo- 
site direction. They cleared the swamps and lataniers 
beyond Esplanade avenue and Rue des Ramparts and the 
"Vieux Carre" gradually lost its identity, but not its indi- 
viduality — and never will. As the years sped by, so as to 
follow the bends of the river, the "Uptown" streets and the 
"Back-of-town" streets in the rear of the Third District, 
were laid out like a snake on the rampage, cross streets 
shooting out from most unlikely places, like sticks from a 



310 



fan, forming a network of labyrinthian thoroughfares 
and allays, rivaled only by the cul-de-sacs and nondescript 
passageways of Paris. And this explains why New Orleans 
streets are as crooked as the proverbial ''ram's horn," and 
are amusing sources of perplexity to the stranger who wan- 
ders a few blocks from Canal street without a native chap- 
erone. Should you desire to test the accuracy of this state- 
ment, gentle reader, take an Esplanade Belt or a Bayou St. 
John car and get off in the neighborhood of the Fair 
Grounds and try to ''hoof it back" to Esplanade avenue 
without following the car tracks. It is safe to guarantee 
that, unless you are provided with a compass, you will send 
"S. 0. S." signals to be extracted from your predicament. 

The Episode of the Man Who Knetv It All. 

The following actual happening illustrates the vagaries 
of New Orleans streets : 

A well-known "Uptown" club man, born and raised in 
that section of the city, was chaperoning a party of visitors 
during the Mardi Gras season. Meeting me on Canal 
street the gentlemen, a college chum of mine, invited me to 
join the revelers. It was a joyous "Sight-seeing party." 

Our host, who prides himself upon knowing all about the 
ins and outs of New Orleans, gave voluminous explanations i 



as we went along. He showed his guests the crooked streets > 



shooting out in bewildering fashion from most out of the " 



way places, took them to the Labatut Homestead, the site 

of the "Cafe des Exiles," Paul Morphy's Home, the Haunt- ;' 

ed House de la Rue Royale, the "Napoleon House," built by n 

Nicholas Girod to foster his wild scheme of kidnapping "Le i 

Paul Caporal" and bringing him to New Orleans; the spot ^ 

where the great fire of 1763 started (Chartres and Tou- || 

louse) ; the Cabildo, Jackson Square, Spanish Fort, West || 

End, the Old Absinthe House— in fact, there was nothing | 

left seeing when his Cadillac finally stopped at Carondelet || 

and Canal, preparatory to a promised luncheon at the Bos- ; 

ton Club. To the expressions of admiration and wonder ; 
voiced by his guests, my friend modestly remarked that 
there was "nothing in New Orleans" he didn't know and no 
one could "put anything over him" when it came to showing 
the sights of the City. Then I naively remarked : 



311 



"How about Milneburg? I don't remember you taking 
us there." My friend was game. "All right," he answer- 
ed ; "let's go to Moreau's for lunch, instead of the club. The 
roads are too bad for motoring, but we have just time to 
catch the train. I'll whizz you down Bourbon street and 
we'll get to the station on Elysian Fields in a few minutes." 

Without further parley, he turned the machine into Bour- 
bon and sped in utter defiance of the traffic regulations, 
down the ancient thoroughfare. On, on he went, past the 
Old Absinthe House, past the French Opera House, past 
Esplanade Avenue, past Claiborne Avenue — and then 
stopped. 

"Something's wrong," he said, looking around in a dazed 
sort of way. 

"Smatter," I queried. 

"I should have reached Elysian Fields inside of five min- 
utes and here I am almost in the woods and no railroad in 
sight. — Well, what are you grinning about?" 

And he turned savagely upon me. 

"I thought you knew all about the City;" I ventured, look- 
ing quizzically at him. 

He straightened up and looked as if he could have eaten me 
up, clothes and all. 

"I do," was decided the reply. "Perhaps you think you 
can give me some pointers?" 

"It's no flattery to say that I can ; but I'll do this later. 
If you want to catch that train, turn the machine around 
and speed like fury down Claiborne Avenue. It's only three 
blocks to Elysian Fields and you'll just make Smoky Mary. 
Get a hike on, for I'm nearly starved and Moreau's chef is 
a friend of mine." 

Fortunately, my friend is a man of quick action and he did 
as requested without saying a word. We reached the rail- 
road crossing just as "Smoky Mary" (the pet name of the 
habitues for the venerable engine attached to the Ponchar- 
train cars) was giving a final snort, preparatory to crawl- 
ing away. We left the machine in charge of the chauffeur 
and scrambled aboard. 

"Now, Mr. Knowall," my friend sarcastically remarked. 
"Let us see w^hat disappointers you can give us about the 
streets of New Orleans." 



3i: 



"Well," I answered, with slow emphasis, '1 don't know 
much more than you, but — but — but — " 

"But what?" impatiently. 

From past experience, I knew my chum's violent temper. 
He is good natured, but becomes exceedingly volcanic when 
taunted. I thought it safer to keep a distance between us 
before answering and moved to a seat opposite. 

"It's like this, Boh," I smilingly retorted, "I may be dippy, 
but I'll be hanged if I haven't sense enough to knew that 
Bourbon Street does not cross Elysian Fields, but turns 
sharply towards the Lake a block beyond Esplanade. You 
no doubt imagined it ran all the way to the Barracks." 

Fortunately, I am a good dodger and the fountain pen 
"shied" at me went harmlessly through the open window 
and buried itself in the soft clay which bordered Stern's 
Factor3^ After this outburst, the object of my tirade im- 
mediately regained his usual cheerfulness and held out his 
hand. 

"That's one on me, George ; put it here, old man, and I'll 
forgive. But say, you idiot, why in blazes didn't you tell me 
I was on the wrong trail?" 

"Have you another fountain in your pocket?" 

"Honest, I haven't." 

"Well, what was the use ? You knew it all and the fun was 
mine." 

He put his hand to his vest pocket and I dodged. 

"It's only a cigar, old top. I'll light it and blow the smoke 
in your face once in awhile." 

And he did. 

The balance of the journey was uneventful. We had a 
most delightful time at Moreau's and our guests were in- 
troduced to the mj'sterious delicacies and tempting side- 
dishes which characterizes Creole cooking. 

This all happened years ago, long before Moreau's Res- 
taurant burned to the water's edge — but to this day, when- 
ever my friend meets me, he invariably queries : 

"Say, George, can you tell me how far it is from Canal 
street to Elysian Fields, via Bourbon street?" 

And I invariably answer : 

"It all depends on the chauffeur." 

Moral: Don't trust New Orleans streets. They are so 
treacherous as the proverbial chink immortalized by Bret 
Harte. 



STREETS RUNNING FROM THE RIVER TO THE 

LAKE. 

Canal Street. 

Few people are aware of the fact that Canal street de- 
rives its name from the fact that a deep open ditch oc- 
cupied the centre of the thoroughfare in colonial days. 
Where the paved neutral ground, with its myriad car tracks 
greets the eye, was a military moat, at the head of which 
was Fort St. Louis, which occupied the spot where the 
United States Customhouse now rises in sombre stateliness. 
It was one of the angles in the fortifications of the City, 
guarding its isolated inhabitants from sudden inroads by 
maurauding Indian bands. The canal was filled in 1838 as 
far as Claiborne avenue, but it was only in 1878 that it was 
completely obliterated. 

Canal street is the dividing line between the "Uptown" 
and ''Downtown" sections of New Orleans. It is one of 
our widest thoroughfares and both sides, from the River 
to Claiborne, are lined with wholesale and retail, emporiums 
of every discription, from five and ten cents stores to ship 
chandler and automobile establishments. It is the "Bon 
Marche" of America and traffic policemen stationed as the 
busiest corners (Magazine to Rampart) have to be on the 
alert from early morning until long after sundown to keep 
the throngs in check. 

All streets parallel to the Mississippi River begin at Canal 
street, the municipal numbers starting "up" or "down" 
from this great artery of the business centre of the Cres- 
cent City. To find approximately how far a certain inter- 
section is from Canal Street, all one has to do is to refer 
to the number opposite the name of the street and the de- 
sired information is forthcoming at once. For example, 
the number on St. Charles Avenue at the intersection of 
Louisiana avenue, "uptown side," is "3400." This means 
that Louisiana Avenue should he thirty-four blocks from 
Canal Street — but it isn't, for the reason explained in the 
prelude to this article. 

All streets radiating from Canal Street change names 
at their source. "Carondelet" uptown becomes "Bourbon" 
downtown, "Camp" changes to "Chartres," "Magazine" to 
"Decatur," etc. Back of Claiborne Street, however, all 
streets are simply designated as "North" or "South." 



200 



400 



To reach any point on Canal street, take the Canal Belt 
cars, which run the entire length of the avenue from the 
river to City Park avenue. The decimals and intersecting 
streets are as follows : 

Uptown Side. Downtown Side 

100 South Water 101 North Water 

The Louisville and Nashville Railroad Depot is 
located at North Water and Canal. 
South Delta North Delta 

Wells 

In the center of the neutral ground is Liberty Place, 
where stands the monumnts to the heroes who fell 
in the uprisings against Carpet Bag rule on Septem- 
ber 14, 1874. 
South Front 201 North Front 

Fulton 

South Peters 401 North Peters 

U. S. Customhouse occupies the whole square from 
North Peters to Decatur. It is an imposing edifice 
and was begun in 1848. 

Tchoupitoulas 

Magazine 501 Decatur 

Dorsiere 

Camp Godchaux Building. 601 Chartres 

, Exchange Place 

St. Charles 701 Royal 

Carondelet Louisiana Club. 801 Bourbon 
Baronne 901 Dauphine 

Chess, Checkers and Whist Club; Boston Club; 
Maison Blanche Building. 
University Place 1001 Burgundy 

(Dryades) 

1100 
1200 
1300 
1400 
1500 



500 

600 

700 
800 
900 



1000 

1100 
1200 
1300 
1400 
1500 

1600 
1700 
1800 
1900 



South Rampart 
Elk Place (S. Basin) 
South Franklin 
South Liberty 
Howard 
South Villere 
South Robertson 
South Claiborne 
South Derbigny 
South Roman 



1600 
1700 
1800 
1900 



North Rampart 
North Basin 
North Franklin 
North Liberty 
North Marais 
North Villere 
North Robertson 
North Claiborne 
North Derbigny 
North Roman 



» » » » »^« * I 



315 







Canal Street. — Continued. 






2000 


South Prieur 


2000 


North Prieur 






2100 


South Johnson 


2101 


North Johnson 






2200 


South Galvez 


2201 


North Galvez 






2300 


South Miro 


2301 


North Miro 






2400 


South Tonti 


2401 


North Tonti 






2500 


South Rocheblave 


2501 


North Rocheblave 






2700 


South Broad 


2701 


North Broad 






2800 


South White 


2S01 


North White 






2900 


South Dupre 


2901 


North Dupre 






3000 


South Gayoso 


3001 


North Gayoso 






3100 


South Salcedo 


3101 


North Salcedo 






3200 


South Lopez 


3201 


North Louez 






3300 


South Rendon 


3301 


North Rendon 






3400 


S. Jeff Davis P'kway 


3401 


North Hagan Ave. 






3500 


South Clark 


3501 


North Clark 






3600 


South Genois 


3601 


North Genois 






3700 


South Telemachus 


3701 


North Telemachus 






3800 


South Cortez 


3801 


North Cortez 






3900 


South Scott 


3901 


North Scott 






4000 


South Pierce 


4001 


North Pierce 






4100 


S. Carrollton Ave. 


4101 


N. Carrollton Ave. 
David 






4200 


South Solomon 


4201 


North Solomon 






4300 


South Hennessy 


4301 


North Hennessy 






4400 


South Alexander 


4401 


North Alexander 






4500 


South Murat 


4501 


North Murat 






4600 


South Olympia 


4601 


North Olympia 






4700 


South St. Patrick 


4701 


North St. Patrick 






4800 


South Bernadotte 


^^01 


North Bernadotte 






4900 


South Anthony 


4901 


North Anthony 





Here begins the Zone of Perpetual Rest, where are located 
the beautiful Cities of the Dead, under whose sod all creeds 
sleep forever in close proximity. This Necropolis extends 
from North and South Anthony streets to Adams avenue, 
on the Lake side of Metairie Road. The burying grounds, 
which are laid out like parks and are respendent with climb- 
ing roses, clematis and evergreens, are located as follows : 
Charity Hospital Cemetery, Canal and Metairie Road. 
Checre Thillm, Canal and South Anthony. 
Chevrel Mikveb, Israel; Canal and South Bernadotte. 
Cypress Grove, Canal and Metairie Road. 
Firemen's, Canal and Metairie Road. 



61*5 



Greenwood, Canal Metairie Road. 

Hebrew Association, Canal and South Anthony. 

Hebrew Congregation, Dispersed of Judah ; Canal and City 

Park avenue. 
Holts, City Park avenue and Bienville. 
Masonic, City Park avenue and Bienville. 
Metairie, Metairie and Shell Road. 
Odd Fellows' Rest, Canal and City Park avenue. 
St. John's Evangelical (Lutheran), Canal and N. Anthony. 
St. Patrick's, Nos. 1 and 2, Canal, near City Park. 
Termine, Dereche Rest, Canal and South Anthony. 

Past City Park avenue, the residential suburb known as 
Lakeview begins. Canal Boulevard, which abuts on City 
Park avenue, and runs through Lakeview, is virtually a 
continuation of Canal street. The streets from City Park 
avenue to the Lake are as follows: 

LAKEVIEW. 

Canal Boulevard. 
South to North, City Park Going Downtown 



Avenue to Lake( Pontchar- 


West to East, New Canal to 




train. 






Bayou St. John. 




Alono 


* Canal Boiilpvard 




— Wp«;t FriH Poiilpvavd 




4700 


Greenwood 


100 


Catina 




4800 


Voisin 


200 


Wuerpel 




4900 


Louque 


300 


Milne 




5000 


Monroe avenue 


400 


Iberville 




5100 


Almonaster 


500 


Louisville 




5200 


Pontalba 


600 


Bienville 




5300 


Homedale 


700 


Canal Boulevard 




5400 


Taylor avenue 


800 


Vicksburg 




5500 


Scott 


900 


Memphis 




5600 


Brooks 


1000 


St. Louis 




5700 


Harmey 


1100 


Toulouse 




5800 


Polk avenue 


1200 


Anthony 




5900 


Germain 


1300 


St. Peter 




6000 


Ringold 


1400 


Orleans Boulevard 




6100 


French 


1500 


St. Ann 




6200 


Harrison avenue 


1600 


Murat 




6300 


Fremont 


1700 


Dumaine 




6400 


Bragg 


-900 


Napoleon 




6500 


Lane 


1900 


St. Philip 





317 



6600 


Smith 


2000 


Solomon 


6700 


Twiggs 


2001 


Ursuline Boulevard 


6800 


Filmore avenue 


2002 


Governor Nicholls 


6900 


Ridgeley 


2303 


Barracks 


7000 


Downs 


2004 


Esplanade 


7100 


Mouton 


2005 


Fort 


7100 


Walker 


.... 


Brown 


7200 


Conrad 




Bayou St. John 


.... 


Adams avenue 
Lake Pontchartrain 







UPTOWN STREETS, RIVER TO/ LAKE. 

Julia Street and Jackson Avenue. 

These two principal thoroughfares, leading from the 
River towards the Lake, although only fifteen blocks apart, 
give a striking contrast of the effect of the ''bend" of the 
River on the geometrical contour of the front of the city. 
At Julia street, Tchoupitoulas is six blocks from the River, 
while at Jackson avenue, it is only about thirty feet, the 
wharves coming almost to the car tracks on Tchoupitoulas 
street. 



Julia Street. 
... Mississippi River 
100 South Water 
... South Delta 
200 South Front 
. . . Fulton 
300 South Peters 

Commerce 
400 Tchoupitoulas 



Jackson Avenue. 



500 
600 



Constance 
Magazine 
Cmp 
Church 



400 

500 

600 

700 

800 

900 

1000 

1100 

1200 

1300 
1400 
1500 



Mississippi River 

Tchoupitoulas 

Rousseau 

St. Thomas 

Chippewa 

Annunciation 

Laurel 

Constance 

Magazine 

Camp 



Chestnut 
Coliseum 
Prytania 



318 



Julia Street. 


Jackson Avenue. j 


700 


St. Charles 


1600 


St. Charles 


800 


Carondelet 


1700 


Carondelet 







.... 


Brainard 


900 


Baronne 


1800 


Baronne 


1000 


Dryades 


1900 


Dryades 


1100 


S. Rampart 


2000 


S. Rampart 


1200 


Saratoga 




Saratoga 


1300 


S. Franklin 


2100 


S. Franklin 


1400 


S. Liberty 


2200 


S. Liberty 


1500 


Howard 


2300 


Howard 


.... 


Freret 


2400 


Freret 


1600 


S. Robertson 


2500 


S. Robertson 


.... 


Magnolia 


2600 


Magnolia 


1700 


Clara 


2700 


Clara 


.... 


Willow 


2800 


Willow 

S. Claiborne 


.... 


S. Claiborne 


2900 


1800 


S. Derbigny 


3000 


S. Derbigny 


1900 


S. Roman 


3100 


S. Roman 


2000 


S. Prieur 


J200 


S. Prieur 


2100 


S. Johnson 


'o300 


S. Johnson 


2200 


S. Galvez 


3500 


S. Galvez 


2300 


S. Miro 


3600 


S. Miro 


2400 


S. Tonti 


3700 


S. Tonti 


2500 


S. Rocheblave 


3800 


S. Rocheblave 


2600 


S. Dorgenois 


3900 


S. Dorgenois 


2700 


S. Broad 


4000 


S. Broad 


2800 


S. White 
S. Dupre 


4200 




2900 


S. Dupre 


3000 


S. Gayoso 


4300 


S. Gayoso 


3100 


S. Salcedo 


4400 


S. Salcedo 


3200 


S. Lopez 


4500 


S. Lopez 


3300 


S. Rendon 


4600 


S. Rendon 


3400 


S. Hagan avenue 





S. Hagan avenue 


3500 


S. Clark 





Termination of Jack- | 


3600 


S. Genois 




son Avenue j 


3700 


Telemachus 




j 


3800 


S. Cortez 




j 


3900 


S. Scott 






4000 


S. Pierce 




j 


4100 


S. Carrollton avenue 






4200 


S. Solomon 







^ » » » » » 



319 



4300 S. Carrollton 

4400 S. Solomon 

4500 S. Hennessy 

4600 S. Alexander 

4700 S. Murat 

4800 S. Olympia 

4900 S. St. Patrick 

5000 S. Bernadotte 

5001 S. Anthony 

.... City Park Avenue 

Continues on East side of New Orleans Canal to West 

End, on Lake Pontchartrain, parallel to West End Boule- 
vard. 

UPTOWN STREETS, RIVER TO LAKE. 

Louisiana and Napoleon Avenues. 

There is a slight difference in the corner numbers of 
these spacious avenues, but the discrepancy is sufficient to 
cause annoyance. For example, Tchoupitoulas is "500" 
and Camp "1200'* at Louisiana Avenue, while the respective 
numbers are "600" and "1000" at Napoleon Avenue. A 
Person desiring to go to "1200" Napoleon and taking 
Louisiana Avenue as a guide, will find himself at Coliseum 
street, instead of Camp, and would have to walk two blocks 
more than bargained for. 

Here are the two avenues placed side by side for refer- 
ence purposes: 

Louisiana Avenue. Napoleon Avenue. 

Forty-one blocks from Fifty-three blocks from 
Canal street on St. Charles Canal street by actual count, 
avenue by actual count, but but only forty-four accord- 
thirty-four according to the ing to the decimal system. 



decim 

600 

700 

800 

900 

1000 

1100 


al system. 
Missisippi River 
Tchoupitoulas 


400 
500 

700 
700 
800 
900 


Mississippi River. 
Leake Avenue 
Tchoupitoulas 


Chippewa 

Annunciation 

Laurel 

Constance 

Magazine 




Annunciation 
Laurel 
Constance 
Magazine 



320 



Louisiana Avenue. 


Napoleon Avenue. 


1200 


Camp 


1000 


Camp 


1300 


Chestnut 


1100 


Chestnut 


1400 


Coliseum 


1600 


Coliseum 






1300 
1400 


Perrier 


1500 


Prytania 


Prytania 






1500 
1600 


Pitt 


1600 


St. Charles Avenue. 


St. Charles avenue 


1700 


Carondelet 


1700 


Caronrelet 


1800 


Baronne 


1800 


Baronne 


1900 


Dryades 


1900 


Dryades 


2000 


South Rampart 


2000 


S. Rampart 


2100 


Saratoga 


2100 


Saratoga 


6200 


South Franklin 


6200 


S. Franklin 


2300 


South Liberty 


2300 


S. Liberty 


2400 


Howard 


2400 


Howard 


2500 


Freret 


2500 


Freret 


2600 


South Robertson 


2600 


S. Robertson 


2700 


Magnolia 


2700 


Magnolia 


2800 


Clara 


2800 


Clara 


2900 


Willow 


2900 


Willow 


3000 


South Claiborne 


3000 


S. Claiborne ave. 


3100 


South Derbigny 


3100 


S. Derbigny 


3200 


South Roman 


3600 


S. Roman 


3300 


S. Prieur 


3300 


S. Prieur 


3400 


S. Johnson 


3400 


S. Johnson 


3500 


S. Galvez 


3500 


S. Galvez 


3600 


S. Miro 


3600 


S. Miro 


3700 


S. Tonti 


3700 


S. Tonti 


3800 


S. Rocheblave 


3800 


S. Rocheblave 


3900 


S. Dorgenois 


3900 


S. Dorgenois 




S. Broad Avenue 




S. Broad avenue 



Louisiana and Napoleon avenues end at South Broad. At 
the junction of Napoleon avenue and South Broad is Broad 
Place, a pretty residential sub-division, dotted with elegant 
homes and beautiful gardens. At the junctions of Louisi- 
ana avenue and South Broad, going towards S. Claiborne, 
another residential park, knov^oi as Louisiana avenue Park- 
way, is being developed. 

The distance between Napoleon and Louisiana avenues 
on the River front is thirteen blocks, but as one journeys 
"back of town," the intervening streets disappear one by 



..»«>*4 



321 



one, until the distance is narrowed to about a block at the 
termini of the two thoroughfares. 

The vagaries of New Orleans streets are certainly quiz- 
zical. 

PETERS AVENUE AND STATE STREET. 
Peters avenue State street. 



Eighty blocks from Canal 
Street by way of Tchoupi- 
toulas, but only fifty-four 
according to the decimal sys- 
tem. At St. Charles avenue, 
the distance is respectively 
sixty-two and fifty-four. 

Mississippi River 

400 Leake avenue 

500 Tchoupitoulas 

600 Annunciation 

700 Laurel 



800 
900 
1000 
1100 
1200 
1300 
1400 



1500 



Constance 

Magazine 

Camp 

Chestnut 

Coliseum 

Perrier 

Prytania 

Pitt 

Atlantic 

Garfield 



Eigthy-seven blocks from 
Canal street by way of 
Tchoupitoulas, but only sixty 
according to the decimal 
system; at St. Charles ave- 
nue, the distance is respecive- 
ly sixty-eight and sixty. 

Mississippi River 

400 Leake avenue 

300 Tchoupitoulas 

400 Annunciation 

500 Laurel 

600 Patton 

700 Constance 

800 Magazine 

900 Camp 

1000 Chestnut 

1100 Coliseum 

1200 Perrier 

1300 Prytania 

1400 Pitt 



1500 



1600 St. Charles avenue 

1700 Dryades 

1800 S. Rampart 

1900 Saratoga 

2000 S. Franklin 

2100 S. Liberty 

2200 Howard 

2300 Freret 

2400 S. Robertson 

2500 Magnolia 



Garfield 

Hurst 
.... Benjamin 
1600 St. Charles avenue. 



1700 Saratoga 

1800 S. Franklin 

1900 S. Liberty 

2000 Howard 

2100 Freret 

2200 S. Robertson 

6300 Magnolia 



322 





Peters Avenue. 




State Street. 




2600 


Clara 


2400 


Clara 




2700 


Willow 


2500 


Willow 




6800 


Delord 


2600 


Delord 




2900 


Story 


2700 
2800 
2900 
3000 
3100 


Story 

Barrett 

Peters 

Burke 

S. Claiborne 
















3000 


S. Claiborne 




8100 


Ppfpr<? 








8200 










Termination of Peters ave 


_ 










3200 


Hodge 








3300 


Burthe 








3400 


Hopkins 








3500 


Minturn 








3600 


York 








3700 


McKenna 








3800 


Hewes 








3900 


Baldwin 








4000 


Hoffman 








4100 


Mc Donogh 








4200 


Woodruff 








4300 


Grape 
Breedlove 





LOWER LINE AND SOUTH CARROLTON AVENUE. 

Lowerline is one of the ''arteries'' from which many 
streets radiate. It is eighty-five blocks by actual count 
from Canal street by way of St. Charles avenue, but seven- 
ty-four according to the decimal system. 

South Carrollton Avenue is ninety-four blocks from Canal 
street by way off St. Charles by actual count, but eighty- 
four according to the decimal system. This thoroughfare 
forms the upper ''stick" of the fan of which Canal street is 
the lower "stick" and at the Mississippi River is only forty- 
five blocks from Canal street on a straight line by way of 
Carrollton avenue. 

The distance between Lowerline and Carrollton avenue 
is only nine blocks, but the bend of the river is so acute in 
that section, that eleven streets which run parrallel to St. 
Charles avenue are obliterated at Carrollton avenue. 



323 



The two thoroughfares are placed side by side for com- 
parative purposes: 

Lowerline Street. South Carrollton Avenue. 



100 


Leake avenue. 




. Leake avenue. 


200 


General Hood 

Wall 

Esther 

Ann 

Mississipi 










300 












400 


Irma 
Macarty 












Felicia 

Commercial 

Carrollton 

Pearl 

St. Charles avenue 


60( 








500 








600 


) St. Charles avenue. 


700 


Hampson 


70( 


) Hampson 


800 


Maple 


80( 


) Maple 


900 


Burthe 


90( 


) Burthe 


1000 


Elm ] 


L00( 


) Elm 


1100 


Zimle 


L10( 


} Zimple 


1200 


Oak 


L20( 


) Oak 


1300 


Plum 


L30( 


) Plum 


1400 


Poplar 


L40( 


) Poplar 


1500 


Jeannette 

Wapping 

Birch : 


L50( 


) Jeannette 


1600 


L60( 


) Birch 


1700 


Bore 


L70( 
L80( 






) Green 


1800 


Hickory : 


) Hickory 


1900 


Cohn 


L90( 


) Cohn 




Destrehan 

S. Rampart ' 






2000 


200( 


) Spruce 


2100 


Saratoga ' 


210( 


} Panola 


2200 


S. Franklin \ 


220( 


3. Sycamore 


2300 


S. Liberty ^ 


>30( 


) Neron 


2400 


Howard ' 


>40( 


) S. Claiborne avenue 


2500 


Freret ^ 


^50( 


) Nelson 


6600 


S. Robertson 1 


>60( 


) Apple 


2700 


Magnolia ' 


>70( 


) Belfast 


2800 


Clara 1 


280( 


) Apricot 


2900 


Wilow 1 


>90( 


) Pritchard 



324 



Lowerline Street. 


S 


. Carrollton Avenue. 


3000 


S. Claiborne avenue 


3000 


Fig 






3100 


Colapissa 
Oleander 






3200 
3300 






Forshey 
Olive 






3400 
3500 






Edinburg 
Palm 






3600 
3700 


3700 


Stroelitz 


Stroelitz 


.... 


Washington avenue 


.... 


Washington avenue 


3800 


Palmetto 


3800 


Palmetto 


3900 


Dixon 


3900 


Dixon 


.... 


Howard Avenue 


.... 


Howard avenue 


New Orleans Canal 


.... 


New Orleans Canal 


Termination of Lowerline 






Street 


, 










4000 


Julia 






4100 


Tulane avenue 






4600 


Ulloa 






4300 


D'Hemecourt 






4400 


Baudin 






4500 


Palmyra 






4600 


Cleveland 
Canal 



Continues on other side of Canal Street as North Carroll- 
ton Avenue. 

UPTOWN STREETS PARALLEL TO THE RIVER. 

Tchoupitoulas Street and St. Charles Avenue. 

Tchoupitoulas is the first street nearest the Mississippi 
river running without interruption to Audubon Park. 

St. Charles avenue is the principal thoroughfare of eNw 
Orleans and winds its serpentine route from Canal to South 
Carrollton Avenue. 

These two thoroughfares have been purposely selected 
and placed side by side to show the changes made in the 
distribution of streets by the bends of the river in the sect- 
ion they parallel. Scores of short streets jut out here and 
there and to calculate the actual distance from any given 
point by referring to the decimals on the street corners, is 
totally out of the question. 






325 



For example : 

The municipal number on Tchoupitoulas street at its in- 
tersection with Felicity is *'1800." Count the streets one 
by one Tchoupitoulas from Canal to Felicity and you'll find 
the number to be thirty-one. 

The municipal number on St. Charles avenue at its in- 
tersection with Felicity is "1800." Count the streets one 
by one on St. Charles avenue from Canal to Felicity and 
you'll find the number to be twenty-three. 

Why this discrepancy? 

The answer is simple : Felicity has been selected as the 
standard for all streets running uptown which intersect 
that thoroughfare, no matter what the distance from Canal 
street may be. This explains why some decimals run two or 
three blocks near the River front. This is done to make 
up the deficiency caused by the fact that only through 
streets are considered by the decimal system and the short 
streets are left to shift for themselves. 

Another anomaly : 

The municipal number on Howard Avenue at its inter- 
section with St. Charles avenue is "700." Exactly one block 
further up on St. Charles avenue is Calliope Street. The 
stranger expecting to find "700" tacked on Calliope will 
have to rub his eyes pretty hard for the mystic numbers 
"1600" will greet his startled vision. 

Again, the explanation is simple: 

St. Charles avenue is the standard for numbering streets 
intersecting it and is divided into zones, as follows : 

700 Zone : From Canal to Howard avenue. 

1600 Zone: From Calliope to Audubon Park. 

600 Zone: From upper end of Audubon Park to Protec- 
tion Levee, upper City limits. 

On Canal, at St. Charles, the distance from the river is 
eleven blocks; the municipal number is "700." 

On Howard avenue, at St. Charles, nine blocks from the 
river, the municipal number is "700." 

On Calliope, at St. Charles, ten blocks from the river, the 
municipal number is "1600." 

On Jackson avenue, at St. Charles, thirteen blocks from 
the river, municipal number is "1600." 

On Louisiana avenue, at St. Charles ten blocks from the 
river, the municipal number is "1600." 



326 



On Napoleon Avenue, at St. Charles, sixteen blocks from 
the river, the municipal number is ''1600." This is 
one of the few important street v^here the number of streets 
from the river corresponds with the decimal ' number at 
the intersecting thoroughfare. 

On Broadway, at St. Charles, the distance narrows to 
eleven blocks from the River; the municipal number is 
''600." 

On South Carrollton avenue, at St. Charles, the River is 
barely a block away; the municipal number is "600." 

It will thus be seen that, no matter how many blocks St. 
Charles avenue is from the River, the intersecting streets 
are designated by the same zone numbers. 

Here are the two streets, side by side, for comparison : 



St. Charles Avenue. 

100 Canal 

200 Common 

300 Gravier 

Union 

400 Commercial Place 

. . . Perdido 

500 Poydras 

. . . North 

600 Lafayette 

. . . South 

700 Girod 

800 Julia 

900 St. Joseph 



1000 Howard avenue 



Tchoupitoulas. 
100 Canal 
200 Common 
300 Gravier 



400 Natchez 



500 Poydras 



600 Lafayette 



700 Girod 

.... Notre Dame 

800 JuHa 

900 St. Joseph 

.... North Diamond 

.... South Diamond 

1000 Howard avenue 

.... Poeyfarre 



1 1100 


Calliope 
Clio 
Erato 
Thalia 


1100 
1200 
1300 






1 1200 
! 1300 
j 1400 


Gaiennie (Clio) 

Erato 

Thalia 

Theresa 

Hunter 

Bellechasse 




j 








j 








1500 


Melpomene 


.... 











J 



327 





St, Charles Avenue. 


Tchoupitoulas Street. 




leoo 


Terpsichore 


1400 


Terpsichore 




1700 




.... 


Henderson 
Euterpe 




Euterpe 




1 


Polymnia 








.... 




1500 


Race 
Orange 








1800 




1600 
1700 
1800 


Richard 
Market 

St. James 

Celeste 

Felicity 
















Felicity 




1900 




1900 


Nuns 
St Mary 




St. Mary 




2000 


St. Andrew 


2000 


St. Andrew 




2100 




2100 


Adele 
Josephine 




Josephine 




2200 


Jackson avenue 


2200 


Jackson avenue 




2300 


Philip 


2300 


Philip 










Sorapuru 
First 




2400 


First 


2400 




2500 


Second 


2500 


Second 




2600 


Third 


2600 


Third 




2700 


Fourth 


2700 


Fourth 




2800 


Washington avenue 


2800 


Washington avenue 




2900 


Sixth 


2900 


Sixth 






Conery 








3000 


Seventh 


3000 


Seventh 




3100 


Eighth 


3100 


Eighth 




3200 




3200 


Ninth 
Harmony 




Harmony 




.... 


Pleasant 


.... 


Pleasant 




3300 


Toledano 


3300 


Toledano 




3400 


Louisiana avenue 


3400 


Louisiana avenue 




3500 


Delachaise 


3500 


Delachaise 




.... 


Aline 


.... 


Aline 




3600 


Foucher 


3600 


Foucher 






Antonine 


.... 


Antonine 




3700 


Amelia 


3700 


Amelia 




3800 


Peniston 


3800 


Peniston 




3900 


General Taylor 


3900 


General Taylor 




1 






Austerlitz 









328 



St 


. Charles Avenue. 


Tchoupitoulas Street, 


4000 


Constantinople 


4000 


Constantinople 1 


1 4100 


Marengo 


4100 


Marengo 1 


1 4200 


Milan 


4200 


Milan | 


4300 


General Pershing 


4300 


General Pershing j 


4400 


Napoleon avenue 


4400 


Napoleon avenue }> 


4500 


Jena 


4500 


Jena 


4600 


Cadiz 


4600 


Cadiz 


4700 


Valence 


4700 


Valence j 
Marshal Ney (Lyons) j 


4800 


Bordeaux 


4800 


Bordeaux 


4900 


Upperline 


4900 


Upper Line 


5000 


Robert 


5000 


Robert 


5100 


Soniat 


5100 


Soniat 


5200 


Dufossat 


5200 


Dufossat 


5300 




5300 


Bellecastle 
Valmont 


Valmont 


.... 


Leontine 


.... 


Leontine 


5400 


Peters avenue 


5400 


Peters avenue 


5500 


Octavia 


5500 


Octavia 


5600 


Joseph 


5600 


Joseph 


5700 


Arabella 


5700 


Arabella 


5800 


Nashville avenue 


5800 


Nashville avenue 


5900 


Rosa Park 
Eleonore 


5900 




Eleonore 


■ 
.... 

6000 




6000 


Alonzo 
State 


State 


6100 


Webster 


6100 


Webster j 


6200 


Henry Clay 


6200 


Henry Clay j 


6300 


Palmer avenue 
Calhoun 


6300 


} 


Calhoun j 


6400 


Exposition Boulevard 6400 


Exposition Boulevard j 




Audubon Park 




Lower Limits of Audu- j 




Jesuits Place 




bon Park. j 





Little Jesuits church 




Audubon Park. j 


.... Loyola University 




Termination of j 


.... Newcomb Place 




Tchoupitoulas St. 


.... 


Tulane University 






6900 


Audubon Place (con 


- 


■ • . 




tinues as Audubon 


1 




Boulevard) 




1 


7000 


Walnut 




1 



329 



St. 


Charles Avenue, 




Upper limits of Audu 




bon Park . 


7100 


Audubon 


7200 


Broadway 


7300 


Pine 


7400 


Lowerline 


.... 


Millaudon 


7500 


Cherokee 


7600 


Hillary 


7700 


Adams 


7800 


Burdette 


7900 


Fern 


7928 


Huso 


8000 


Short 


8100 


S. Car ronton avenue 



St. Charles avenue ends at South Carrollton avenue. The 
municipal numbers beyond, on streets running parallel to 
St. Charles avenue (as far as the upper City limits), are as 
follows : 
8200 Dublin 
8300 Dante 
8400 Canibronne 
8500 Joilet 
8600 Leonidas 
8700 Monroe 
8800 Eagle 
8900 General Ogden 

Protection Levee. 

Upper limits of the 
City of New Or- 
leans. 

UPPTOWN STRETS PARALLEL TO THE RIVER. 

South Claiborne Avenue. 

South Claiborne is the only street between St. Charles 
and the Lake which runs uninterruptedly from Canal to the 
upper city limits and can be used as a guide for ''back of 
tovvm" cross streets. At Canal street, Claiborne is seven- 
teen blocks from the River, at Napoleon avenue it is thirty, 
and at South Carrollton avenue, twenty-four. This zig- 



;30 



r"^*^ 


zag process is due to the fact that new streets shoot out here \ 




and there and old ones are 


cut short in the zenith of their j 




caiee] 


'^ 










South Claiborne 




j 


100 


Canal 


4500 


Jena j 


j 


200 


Cleveland 


4600 


Cadiz 


j 


.... 


Palmyra 


4900 


Upperline 


j 


300 


Tulane 


5000 


Robert 


! 


400 


Gravier 


5100 


Soniat ; 


! 


500 


Perdido 


.... 


Barret ''■ 


1 


600 


Poydras 


5400 


Peters Avenue 




700 


Lafayette 


5500 


Octavia 




.... 


Cypress 


5600 


Joseph 




800 


Julia 


5800 


Nashville Avenue 




.... 


Felicity 


.... 


Peters 




.... 


St. Andrew 


6000 


State 




.... 


New Basin 


6200 


Palmer Avenue 




900 


Howard avenue 


.... 


Burke 


1 


1000 


Euphrosine 


6300 


Calhoun 




1100 


Calliope 


.... 


Burthe 




1600 


Clio 


.... 


Audubon Blvd. 


1 


1300 


Erato 


7300 


Audubon 




1400 


Thalia 


.... 


Sycamore 




2000 


Melpomone 


7400 


Broadway 


1 

i 




Washington 


7500 


Pine 






Bernadotte 




Neron 


♦ 
1 


2100 


Josephine 


7600 


Lower Line 


♦ 

i 


2200 


Jackson Avenue 




Mobile 


! 


2300 


Philip 


7700 


Adams 




2400 


First 


7800 


Burdette 


♦ 

1 


2500 


Second 


7900 


Fern 




2600 


Third 


8000 


Short 


1 


2700 


Fourth 


8100 


S. Carrollton Avenue. 


i 


2800 


Washington Avenue 


8200 


Dublin 


j 


2900 


Sixth 


8300 


Dante 


1 


3300 


Toledano 


8400 


Cambronne 


! 


.... 


Belmont 


8500 


Joliet 


i 


3400 


Louisiana Avenue 


8600 


Leonidas ' . 




3500 


Delachaise 


8700 


Monroe 




4100 


Gen. Taylor 


8800 


Eagle 




4200 


Milan 


8900 


General Odgen 


! 


4300 


Gen. Pershing 




Holly Grove 




4400 


Napoleon Avenue 




Upper city limits. 



331 





DOWNTOWN STREETS. 






Toulouse Street and Esplanade Avenue. 






Toulouse. 




Esplanade avenue. 




400 


N. Peters 


300 


N. Peters 




500 


Decatur 


500 


Decatur 




600 


Chartres 


600 


Chartres 




700 


Royal 


700 


Royal 




1 800 


Bourbon 


800 


Bourbon 




900 


Dauphine 


900 


Dauphine 




1000 


Burgundy 


1000 


Burgundy 




1100 


N. Rampart 


1100 


N. Rampart 




1200 


N. Basin 


1200 


St. Claude 




1300 


N. Franklin 


.... 


Treme 




1400 


N. Liberty 








1500 


Marais 


1300 


Marais 




1600 


N. Villere 


1400 


N. Villere 




1700 


N. Robertson 


1500 


N. Robertson 




1800 


N. Claiborne avenue 


1600 


N. Claiborne 






N. Derbigny 


1700 


N. Derbigny 






N. Roman 


1800 


N. Roman 






N. Prieur 


2000 


N. Prieur 






N. Johnson 


2100 


N. Johnson 










Bayou Road 
N. Galvez 






N. Galvez 


2100 








2200 


Milne Road 
N. Miro 




N. Miro 






N. Tonti 


2300 


N. Tonti 






N. Rocheblave 


6400 


N. Rocheblave 






N. Dorgenois 


2500 


N. Dorgenois 






N. Broad 


2600 


N. Broad 




2800 




2700 
6800 


Bell 
Crete 
N. White 








N. White 




2900 




2900 


De Soto 
N. Dupre 




N. Dupre 










Lepaere 




3000 


N. Gayoso 


3000 


N. Gayoso 




3100 







Grand Route St. John 




N. Salcedo 




3200 


N. Lopez 


3100 


N. Lopez 










Encampment 









331' 



— T 



Toulouse. 



3300 


N. Rendon 


340O 


N. Hagan avenue 


3500 


Moss 


.... 


Bayou St. John 


3600 


N. Genois 


3700 


N. Telemachus 


3800 


N. Cortez 


3900 


N. Scott 


4000 


N Pierce 


4100 


N. Carrollton avenue 


.... 


David 


4200 


N. Solomon 


4300 


N. Hennessey 


4400 


N. Alexander 


4500 


N. Murat 


4600 


N. Olympia 


4700 


N. St. Patrick 


4800 


N. Bernadotte 


.... 


City Park avenue 




(Old Metaire Road) 



Esplanade A venue. 
.... Florida 
3200 Mystery 
3300 Maurepas 



Moss 

Bayou St. John 
City Park 
Delgado Museum 
Esplanade avenue stops at 
Bayou St. John, and recom- 
mences in the rear of the 
City Park, but the intersect- 
ing streets are not num- 
bered - 



;i3:r 



DOWNTOWN STREETS. 

Elysian Fields Sivenue, 

Elysian Fields avenue begins at the River, one block be- 
low Esplanade avenue, and runs in a straight line to Lake 
Pontchartrain. The venerable Pontchartrain Railroad oc- 
cupies the centre of the neutral ground for its entire length. 

Elysian Fields avenue is the pivotal ''stick" of the *'fan" 
which forms the network of short streets which shoot out 
here and there from paralelled thououghfares and lose them- 
selves in the lataniers and stunted undergrowth which make 
a tropical jungle of the territory beyond Gentilly avenue. 
Esplanade avenue is the upper ''stick" and Lafayette ave- 
nue the lower "stick" of this municipal fan. This fantastic 
arrangement of streets plays havoc when a stranger has 
the temerity to dabble with distances in the Third District. 
For example, Esplanade avenue is less than a city block dis- 
tant from Esplanade avenue at the River, whereas, after 
the fan is opened (figuratively speaking, of course), and 
one stands at the intersection of Broad (now Law) and 
Elysian Fields, the distance between the two avenues is 
about twenty blocks. The decimal "2200" is taken a stand- 
ard in calculating the distance from Canal street to Elysian 
Fields. Esplanade avenue, which is the upper limit of the 
"Vieux Carre," or original New Orleans, is only fourteen 
blocks from Canal street, but only eight decimals are allotted 
to the territory between Esplanade and Elysian Fields, no 
matter how many intervening streets zig-zag like so many 
spokes from a wheel toward the Lake. At North Tonti 
street and Elysian Fields, twenty-four blocks from the river 
and about fourty-two blocks from Canal street, the munici- 
pal number, instead of being "4200", is "2200," the same 
as at North Peters and Elysian Fields, fourteen blocks from 
Canal street. 

Here are the intersecting Streets on Elysian Fields Avenue. 
Corner Intersecting Nearest 

Number. Street. Car Line. 



400 


North Peters 


Carondelet 




500 


Decatur 


Carondelet 




600 


Chartres 


Carondelet 




700 


Royal 


Carondelet 




800 


Dauphine 


Dauphine 





334 



900 
1000 
1100 
1200 
1300 
1400 
1500 
1600 
1700 
1800 
1900 
2000 
2100 
2200 
2300 
2400 
2500 
2600 



Burgundy 

N. Rampart 

St. Claude ave. 

Marais 

Urquhart 

N. Villere 

N. Robertson 

N. Claiborne 

N. Derbigny 

N. Roman 

N. Prieur 

N. Johnson 

Grant 

N. Miro 

N. Tonti 

Virtue 

. Dorgenois 

Law 



Dauphine 

Dauphine 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Villere 

Villere 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 

Claiborne 



From Law (Broad street) to Gentilly avenue, only rolling 
pastures greet the eye and beyond Gentilly avenue, after 
one passes the quaint Jewish Cemetery and Gentilly Ter- 
race, uncleared lands and swamps are encountered. The 
virgin soil is rich and only waits the advent of some wide- 
awake and audacious promoter to reap the golden harvest 
which is certain to be the reward. The squares from Law to 
Milneburg have no houses, and therefore no municipal num- 
bers, and we have placed a numeral opposite each street so 
as to facilitate the reader in calculating distances. Here 
are the "homeless" blocks : 



2700 


Hope 


2800 


Florida 


2900 


Marigny ave. 


3000 


Duels 


3100 


Industry 


3200 


Agriculture 


3300 


Abundance 


3400 


Treasure 


3500 


Benefit 


3600 


Humanity 


3700 


Pleasure 


3800 


Ne Plus Ultra 


3900 


Sere 



5000 


Sumpter 


5100 


Car not 


5200 


Brutus 


5300 


Monroe ave 


5400 


T^imoleon 


5500 


Selnia 


5600 


Robin 


5700 


St. James avenue 


5800 


Mithra 


5900 


Odin 


6000 


Mendes 


6100 


Calhoun avenue 


6200 


Athis 



335 



4000 Beauregard 6300 Pressburg 

4100 Manuel 6400 Vienna 

4200 Foy 6500 Dublin 

4300 Gentilly Boulevard 6600 Edinburg avenue 

4400 Caton 6700 Mexico 

4500 Senate 6800 New York 

4600 Pelodias 6900 Frankfort 

4700 Mandolin Columbia 

4800 Stephen Girard Lake Ponchartrain 

4900 Lombard 

DOWNTOWN STREETS. 
GENTILLY BOULEVARD. 

The Evolution of a Boulevard. 

There is a thoroughfare in New Orleans which has the 
proud distinction of having five distinct names. It begins 
as an overgrown alley at North Peters Street, two blocks 
North (uptown side) of Esplanade avenue, where it is 
known as "Hospital street." This quasi-medical name was 
given it in the early days of the city, when a hospital for 
sailors is said to have been located on the river front, where 
the street begins. At North Rampart avenue, a distance 
of seven blocks from the River, the narrow thoroughfare 
broadens into an avenue and is knovm as "Governor 
Nichols." It then continues an uneventful course as far 
as North Villere street, a distance of four blocks, when it 
suddenly swerves in the direction of Esplanade avenue and 
after it crosses North Claiborne avenue, two blocks away, 
it drops the name of "Governor Nichols" and becomes 
"Bayou Road." Its curve becomes acute and it 
crosses Esplanade avenue, formerly its paralled street, at 
North Galvez street, and when it reaches North White 
street in its meanderings it becomes "Gentilly avenue." It 
then zigzags like a maudlin anaconda in the direction of 
Elysian Fields avenue and after crossing the Ponchartrain 
Railroad tracks, discards all previous nomenclature and 
blossoms out as "Gentilly Boulevard." Like the legandary 
brook made immortal by Tennyson, it keeps on "running" 
until it reaches Lee Station, ten miles further up (but still 
within the city limits), where the pathfinder abandoned 
the search for its terminus, which probably ramifies to 



336 



Lake Itasca or some other equally remote spot on this side 
of the Arctic Circle. 

Here are the various intersections of this highway with 
its quintuple aliases: 
Hospital Street. 
400 N. Peters 
.... Gallatin 

500 Decatur | 

600 Chartres | 

700 Royal ♦ 

800 Bourbon | 

900 Dauphine t 

1000 Burgundy { 

« 



1100 N. Rampart 

Continues as 
Governor Nicholls. 



1200 St Claude avenue j 



1300 


N. Liberty 


1400 


Marais 


1500 


N. Villere 


1600 


N. Robertson 


1700 


N. Claiborne avenue 


Continues as 


Bayou Road. 


1800 


N. Derbigny 


1900 


N. Roman 


.... 


Barracks 


2000 


N. Prieur 


2100 


N. Johnson 


2200 


N. Galvez 




Esplanade Avenue 




Milne Road 


2300 


N. Miro 


2400 


N. Tonti 


2500 


N. Rochablaye 


.... 


Kerlerec 


N. Dorgenois 


.... 


Bell 


.... 


N. Broad 


.... 


De Soto 


2800 


N. White 



*^^»»mm»», _ 

337 



Continues as 

GentiUy avenue. 

Lepage 

Columbus 

Laharpe 

Grand Route St. John 

Florida 

Lapeyrouse 

Maurepas 

Fortin 

Onzaga 

D'Abadie 

Aubry 

O'Reilly 

Castiglione 

Seruntine 

St. Bernard avenue 

Paris avenue 

Marigny avenue 

Bruxelles 

Republic 

Havana 

London avenue 

New Orleans 

Allen 

Annette 

St. Anthony 

Bourbon 

Touro 

Frenchmen 
3300 Elysian Fields avenue 
Continues as 
GentiUy Boulevard. 

EDGEWOOD AND GENTILLY TERRACE. 



Streets on GentiUy Boule- 
vard, West to East, from 
Elysian Fields avenue to 
People's avenue Canal. 
GentiUy Boulevard, 



Streets in Edge wood and 
GentiUy Terrace, South to 
North, from Florida (Louis- 
ville and Nashville Railroad 
Crossing, to St. James ave- 



3300 Elysian Fields Ave. nue. 

3400 Marigny St. 

Mandeville 
2300 Clematis (Edgewood 

side only.) 3100 



Louisville and Nash- 
ville Railroad Cross- 
ing. 

Bay 



338 



3500 


Spain 


3200 


Sage 






St. Roch 


3300 


Elder 






Music 


3400 


Myrtle 




3600 


Arts 


3500 


Hawthorne 




2400 


Iris (Edgewood 


side 3600 


Clover . 




j 


only). 


3700 


Lavender 




1 


Painters 


3800 


Jonquil 




1 


Venus 


3900 


Gladiolus 




3700 


Franklin avenue (25004000 


Verbena 






Edgewood side) 


4100 


Jasmine 




j 


De Montluzin St. 


4200 


Wisteria avenue 




j 


Lafaye 


4400 


Gentilly Boulevard 




j 2600 


Lotus. (Edgewood side 4600 


Lombard 




! 


only) . 


4800 


Carnot 




3800 


Baccich 


4900 


Monroe 




j 


Eastern 


5000 


St. James 




[ 


Peoples Avenue Canal 








N. 0. & N. E. Railroad 








Crossing. 










FRANKLIN AVENUE. 




Begins at North Derbigny, eight blocks below Elysian 




Fields avenue, and runs through Edgewood, Gentilly 




Heights and Gentilly Terrace to Lake Pontchartrain. 




1700 


North Derbigny 


Villere Cars. 




1800 


North Roman 


Villere Cars. 




1900 


North Prieur 


Villere Cars. 




[ 2000 


North Johnson 


Villere Cars. 




1 2100 


Grant 


Villere Cars. 




2200 


North Miro 


Villere Cars. 




2300 


North Tonti 


Villere Cars. 




2400 


Virtue 


Villere Cars. 




2500 


North Dorgenois 


Villere Cars.' 




1 2600 


Law (Broad) 


Viller 


e Cars. 






Florida avenue (New Orleans Terminal Rail- 






road Crossing). 


Edgewood begins here. 






Industry 


Villere Cars. 




I 


Agriculture 


Villere Cars. 





H39 





Franklin Avenue. — (Continued). 




Abundance 


Villere Cars. 




Treasure 


Villere Cars. 




Benefit 


Villere Cars. 




Humanity 


Villere Cars. 


3100 


Bay 


Villere Cars. 


3200 


Sage 


Villere Cars. 


3300 


Elder 


Villere Cars. 


3400 


Myrtle 


Villere Cars. 


3500 


Hawthorne 


Villere Cars. 


3600 


Clover 


Villere Cars. 


3700 


Lavender 


Villere Cars. 


3800 


Jonquil 


Villere Cars. 


3900 


Gladiolus 


Villere Cars. 


4000 


Verbena 


Villere Cars. 


4100 


Jasmin 


Villere Cars. 


4200 


Wisteria 


Villere Cars. 


4400 


Gentilly Boulevard 


Gentilly Terrace Be- 


4600 


Lombard 


gins. 


4800 


Garnet 


This is one of the fash- 


5000 


Monroe avenue 


able residential parks of New 


5100 


Selma 


Orleans, and extends between 


5200 


St. James 


the two streets mentioned 




Upper Limits of Gen- (Gentilly avenue and St 




tilly Terrace. 


James), from Elysian Fields 
avenue to Peoples avenue, a 
distance of fifteen city blocks. 


5300 


Mendez 




5400 


Calhoun avenue 




5500 


Ithis 




5600 


Pressburg 




5700 


Vienna 




5800 


Dublin 




5900 


Edinburgh avenue 




6000 


Mexico 




6100 


New York 




6600 


Frankfort 




6400 


America 




6300 


Columbia 

Lake Pontchartrain 






(Milneburg) 


» 



DOWNTOWN STREETS. 

PARALLEL TO RIVER. 

North Peters and North Claiborne. 

North Peters, which begins at Canal street, four blocks 
from the Mississippi river, gradually edges nearer to the 
great waterway and when it has passed the French Market, 
it is the next street to the river and remains so to its 
terminus at the lower city limits. 

North Claiborne avenue is sixteen blocks from the river 
at its starting point at Canal street, according to the deci- 
mal system, but about twenty in reality. It is one of the 
great arteries of the rear of the city and runs through 
thickly populated sections as far as the lower City limits. 
Together with South Claiborne avenue, it forms an un- 
broken highway from the Parish of St. Bernard (lower 
city limits) and the Parish of Jefferson (upper city limits). 
It is the only thoroughfare which intersects the city in its 
entirely and a system of ornamental parks and radiating 
roads has been planned to make this the finest auto drive- 
way in the South. 

Here are the streets and the intersection numbers : 





North Peters. 




North Claiborne. 




100 


Canal 

Crossman 

Iberville 


100 
200 


Canal 




200 


Iberville 




300 


Bienville 


300 


Bienville 




400 


Conti 


400 


Conti . 




500 


St. Louis 


500 


St. Louis 




600 


Toulouse 
Jefferson 


600 


Toulouse 
Carondelet Walk 




700 


St. Peter 


700 


St. Peter 







Orleans (Jackson 
Square). 





Orleans (Treme 
Market). 




800 


St. Ann 


800 


St. Ann 






French Market 

Madison 

Dumaine 


900 












900 


Dumaine 




1000 


St. Philip 


1000 


St Philip 




1100 


Ursuline 


1100 


Ursuline avenue 




1200 


Hospital 


1200 


Governor Nichols 





341 



North Peters, 


North Claiborne. 


1300 


Barracks 


1300 






Bayou Road 
Esplanade avenue 


1400 


Esplanade avenue 


1400 








Kerlerec 


At 


North Peters, Espla- 


1500 


Columbus 


nade and Elysian Fields ave- 


.... 


La Harpe 


nues 


are only one block 


.... 


Lapeyrouse 


apart. 


At North Claiborne 


1600 


St. Bernard avenue 


the t\^ 


^^0 avenues are thirteen 


.... 


New Orleans 


blocks apart. At Esplanade 


.... 


Allen 


and ] 


NT. Peters the corner 


1700 


Annette 


number is "1400;" one 


1800 


St Anthony 


block 


further down, it is 


1900 


Bourbon 


"2200 


>) 


2000 


Touro 


2100 


Frenchmen 


2100 


Frenchmen 


2200 


Elysian Fields 


2200 


Elysian Fields 


2300 


Marigny 


.... 


Marigny 


2400 


Mandeville 


2300 


Mandeville 


2500 


Spain 


.... 


Spain 






2400 
2500 
2600 


St Roch avenue 






Music 






Arts 






Painters 


6600 


Lafayette avenue 


Lafayette avenue 


2700 


Port 


2700 


Port 


2800 


St. Ferdinand 


2800 


St Ferdinand 


3000 


Press 


2900 


Press 


3100 


Montegut 


3000 


Montegut 






3100 


Feliciana 


3200 


Louisa 


Louisa 


3300 


Piety 


3200 


Piety 


3400 


Desire 


3400 


Desire 


3500 


Elmira 


3500 


Elmira 


3600 


Congress 


3600 


Congress 


3700 


Independence 


3700 


Independence 


3800 


Pauline 


3800 


Pauline 


3900 


Alvar 


3900 


Alvar 


4000 


Bartholomev^ 


4000 


Bartholomew 


4100 


Mazant 


4100 


Mazant 


4200 


France 


4200 


France 


4300 


Lesseps 


4300 


Lesseps 



*-— 



342 





4400 


Poland avenue 


4400 Poland avenue 






4500 


Kentucky 


4500 


Kentucky 






4600 


Japonica 


4600 


Japonica 






.... 


Manuel 


.... 


Manuel 






.... 


Convent 


.... 


Convent 






4700 


Sisters 


4700 


Sisters 






4800 


Jourdan avenue 


4800 


Jourdan avenue 






4900 


Deslonde 


4900 


Deslonde 






5000 


Tennessee 


5000 


Tennessee 






5100 


Reynes 


5100 


Reynes 






5200 


Forstall 


5200 


Forstall 






5300 


Lizardi 


5300 


Lizardi 






5400 


Egania 


5400 


Egania 






5500 


Andry 


5500 


Andry 






5600 


Flood 


5600 


Flood 






5700 


Caff in avenue 


5700 


Caffin avenue 






5800 


La Manche 


5800 


La Manche 






5900 


Charbonnet 


5900 


Charbonnet 






6000 


Alabo 


6000 


Alabo 






6100 


Tupelo 


6300 


Tupelo 






6200 
6400 


St Maurice avenue 


6500 
6600 








Tricou 
Delery 






Delery 










6500 


U. S. Barracks 










6600 


Angela 












Mehle 

Termination of North 

Claiborne avenue. 

















.,»,.,»,«'4 



ZVi 



SUBURBS, ADDITIONS AND RESIDENTIAL PARKS. 

Where located and how to reach them. 

Algiers. Fifth District of the City of New Orleans, on 
the left bank of the Mississippi, opposite Canal street. 
Dryades or Louisiana avenue cars and Canal street ferry. 

Amesville. Opposite Napoleon avenue, in Jefferson 
Parish. Laurel, Tchoupitoulas or Napoleon avenue cars 
and Napoleon Avenue ferry. 

Audubon Place. Begins at St. Charles avenue, opposite 
Audubon Park, between Tulane University and Walnut, and 
ends at Freret street. St Charles and Tulane belts or Clio 
and Carondelet cars. 

Audubon Boulevard. Continuation of Audubon Place, 
from Freret back. Carondelet, Clio or South Claiborne 
cars. 

Belmont Place. Begins at South Robertson, between 
Louisiana avenue and Delachaise and ends at South Clai- 
borne. Carondelet, Clio or South Claiborne cars. 

Broad Place. — Junction of Napoleon avenue and South 
Broad. Napoleon avenue cars. 

Belleview. Faces Bayou St. John, City Park side, from 
Esplanade to Spanish Fort. 

Carrollton. Now Seventh District of New Orleans. 
Lower Line to upper city limits (Protection Levee). Any 
car going "Uptown." 

Chalmette Road. West side of Bayou St. John, from 
Taylor avenue to Lake Pontchartrain. 

City Park avenue. Continuation of Metairie Road, from 
Julia (New Basin Canal) to Bayou St. John (near Espla- 
nade avenue). Canal and Esplanade belts or Napoleon 
avenue cars ; also Spanish Fort train. 

City Park Row. Begins at Dumaine, between North 
Carrollton avenue and Morgan Boulevard and ends at city 
Park avenue. Esplanade and Canal belts or Bayou St. John 
cars. 

Covington. A summer resort among the piney woods, 
near the Northern shore of Lake Ponchartrain, about forty 
miles "across the Lake" from New Orleans. An ideal place 
for those suffering from lung troubles. 

Cromwell Place. Continuation of South Liberty street, 
from Palmer avenue to Calhoun. Carondelet or Clio cars. 



Suburbs, Etc. — (Contbiued.) 

Edgeivood Park Addition. Along Franklin avenue, river 
side of Geritilly Boulevard. 

Everett Place. Continuation of Rosa Park, from Sara- 
toga to South Franklin. Continues as Richmond Place. 
Clio or Carondelet cars. 

Exposition Boulevard. Along ''Downtown" side of 
Audubon Park, from Tchoupitoulas t6 St. Charles avenue. 
Any cars going *'UptowTi" West of St. Charles avenue. 

Freret Place. Begins at Octavia, between Garfield and 
Hurst. Prytania or St. Charles belt cars. 

Friscoville avenue. Six blocks below United States Bar- 
racks, from the river to St. Claude. Dauphine cars. 

GentiUy avenue. Continuation of Bayou Road, from 
North White to Elysian Fields. Continues as Gentilly 
Boulevard. Esplanade and Canal belts, Bayou St John, 
Broad or Villere cars ; also Ponchartrain Railroad. 

Gentilly Boulevard. Continuation of Gentilly avenue, 
from Elysian Fields to People avenue. Ponchartrain Rail- 
road or Villere cars. 

Gentilly Terrace Addition. Begins at Elysian Fields and 
Gentilly Boulevard. Pontchartrain Railroad or Villere 
cars. 

Gouldsboro. Opposite Thalia street, on the left bank of 
the Mississippi river, in Jefferson Parish. Jackson ave- 
nue ferry and Algiers and Gretna cars. 

Gretna. — In Jefferson Parish, opposite Jackson avenue. 
Claiborne-Jackson or Tchoupitoulas cars. Jackson avenue 
ferry. 

Harvey. In Jefferson Parish, opposite Louisiana ave- 
enue. Tchoupitoulas, Laurel or Louisiana avenue cars and 
Louisiana avenue ferry. 

Homedale Park. Begins a t Frisco Railroad Crossing 
and ends at Taylor avenue, between Canal Boulevard and 
Hawthorne avenue. 

Jesuits Place. Begins at St. Charles avenue, between 
Tulane University and Loyola University and ends at 
Freret. St. Charles belt, Clio or Carondelet cars. 

Malborough Gate. Junction of Robert and Howard. 

Marquette Place. Continuation of Saratoga, to Jesuits 
Place. Clio or Carondelet cars. 



34; 



Suburbs, Etc. — (Continued.) 

Metairie Road. From City Park avenue, beginning at 
Julia (New Basin Canal) to upper city limits (Protection 
Levee). Napoleon avenue cars. 

Milneburg. On Lake Pontchartrain and Elysian Fields 
avenue. The old-time pleasure resort of fashoinable New 
Orleans ''before the war," but now a picturesque ruin. 
Many a grand dame and gay cavalier danced the minuet in 
the old Washington Hotel ballroom, at present an unsightly 
pile of broken bricks and decayed timbers. Private clubs 
and bath-house now dot the shores and are strung all along 
both sides of the long pier which leads to the wharf where 
the "New Camelia" takes passengers for "across the Lake" 
resorts. Milneburg is reached by the Pontchartrain Railroad, 
the second oldest steam railroad in the United States and 
cruel critics smilingly assert that the same rolling stock 
used in 1827 is in operation today. 

Morgan Boulevard. Begins at North Carrollton avenue, 
between City Park row and North Solomon and ends at 
City Park avenue. Esplanade, Canal or Bayou St. John 
cars. 

Mandeville. On the Northern shores of New Orleans. A 
delightf ull summer resort, where good bathing and sea food 
abounds. Take Pontchartrain Railroad to Milneburg and 
then board steamer "New Camelia" at end of pier. Trains 
leave Louisville and Nashville depot. Canal and Front 
streets, during the summer season every day at 8. A. M. and 
2 P. M. To reach this depot, take any car going out Canal 
street to the River. 

Metairie Park. West side of West End Shell Rooad, from 
the Black Bridge (Frisco Railroad Crossing) to West End. 

New Carrollton. A new residential subdivision, recently 
exploited, a few blocks above Protection Levee. Take Or- 
leans-Kenner cars at North Rampart and Canal streets, or, 
take Coliseum car and walk a few blocks beyond Protection 
Levee. 

Netvcomb Place. St Charles avenue, opposite Audubon 
Park. St Charles Belt cars. 

Palmer Avenue. Continuation of Henry Clay avenue, 
from St. Charles to South Claiborne. St Charles belt, Clio, 
Carondelet or South Claiborne cars. 



346 






Suburbs, Etc. — (Continued.) j 

Park Row. Opposite City Park, near North Carrollton j 

avenue. Esplanade, Canal or Bayou St. John cars. j 

Roosevelt Place. Begins at Orleans, between Olga and ♦ 

Taft Place and ends at Dumaine (near City Park) . Espla- ♦ 

nade or Canal belts. ! 

• 

Rosa Park. Begins at St. Charles avenue, between State { 

and Nashville avenue, and ends at Saratoga. Continues as { 

Everett Place. St. Charles or Tulane belts. { 



Spanish Fort. On Lake Ponchartrain, within the cor- 
porate limits of the city. The only amusement park in New 
Orleans, where the finest cuisine can be had. Open all the 
year round, but the active season is from May to October, 
when vaudeville shows, moving pictures, 'The Whip," Fer- 
ris Wheels, etc., are in full sway. Take Spanish Fort trains 
at Canal and North Rampart streets. Auto highway in 
first class condition. 

Svanish Fort Shell Road. Along East side of Bayou St. 
John, from Esplanade avenue to Spanish Fort. Esplanade 
and Canal belts. 

Taft Place. Begins at Orleans, between Roosevelt Place 
and Bayou St. John, and ends at Dumaine. Esplanade or 
Canal belts or Bayou St. John cars. 

West End. On Lake Ponchartrain, within city limits. 
Once the Coney Island of the South, but now almost aban- 
doned. The home of the Southern Yacht Club, one of the 
famous rowing clubs of the country. There are still some 
good restaurants at West End, where Creole cooking can 
be had — if you have the price. Take Spanish Fort Train, 
at North Rampart and Canal Streets. Fine auto highway 
along New Basin canal. Look out for dangerous curves. 

West Lake Road. Along West side of Bayou St. John, 
from Friedrichs avenue and Taylor avenue. Esplanade 
and Canal belts. 

Westiuego. In Jefferson Parish, opposite Pine Street. 
Magazine cars and Pine Street ferry. 

Wogan Parkway. North of City Park. Begins at West 
Lake Road, between Reidensheimer and Weiblen, and ends 
at Grand Route Bell. Esplanade or Canal belts. 



347 



I 









ALGIERS. 






Opelousas avenue. 


1200 


Verret avenue 


200 


River 






South Pacific R. 


300 


Brooklyn 


avenue 


1300 


Thayre avenue 


400 


Teche 




1400 


Le Boeuf avenue 




Bouny 




1600 


Whitney avenue 


500 


Nunez 






Webster avenue 


600 


Verret 




1700 


Wagner 




Olivier 




1800 


Hendee 


700 


Vallette 






Summer 


800 


Belleville 






Behrman avenue 


900 


Elmira Avenue. 




Numa 


1000 


Pacific avenue 




Nelson 


1100 


Atlantic « 


avenue 


Farragut 



R. 



348 



THE MOTOR LEAGUE 
o/ LOUISIANA 

PURNELL M. MILNER, President 



Automobile Owners 
ATTENTION ! 

Read The Safety Suggestions 

Presented in the Following Pages 

Make Them Constantly Effective 



I 

The Motor League of Louisiana, in j 

co-operation with the PoHce Depart- j 

ment, requests your help to regulate | 

traffic » and assist in creating respect | 

for law and greater thoughtfulness | 

amongst each other and other people. I 



349 



TRAFFIC REGULATIONS OF THE CITY OF 
NEW ORLEANS. 



♦ A Traffic Officer has full control of traffic at his corner. 

♦ He endeavors to act wisely. You can help him if you will 
j obey orders and signals, without question. Do not become 
j impatient and sound your horn, which annoys the occu- 
} pants of nearby offices, if he does not open up the traffic to 
I suit you. If he is discourteous report him to the Police 

Department verbally or in writing. 

If you hear a fire, police or ambulance motor car ap- 
proaching pull to the right-hand curb and stop. 

j Speed limit in business district. Rampart to river and Es- 

I planade Avenue to Howard Avenue, is 15 miles per hour; 

j going over intersections and turning corners, 71/2 miles per 

I hour; outside the busiess district, 20 miles per hour. 

♦ Slow-moving traffic, keep to the right-hand curb as close 

♦ as possible, thereby giving a clear roadway for faster-mov- 
I ing vehicles to pass to the left. 

I Drivers of motor vehicles should pull to the right on a 

} signal from any one approaching from the rear. If you 

I refuse to do this you stamp yourself as inconsiderate of the 

j rights of others ; you also disobey the State law. 

j When meeting vehicles approaching from the opposite 

j direction, turn to the right; when passing vehicles going 

j in the same direction, keep to the left. 

j Drivers should notice the white lines on the pavement, 

j and stop at the first white line ; if they have passed the first 

j white line when the signal is changed they should go right 

I through. Frequently drivers stop inside the white line, 

j thereby blocking the crossing and interfering with the pas- 

j sage of pedestrians. 

I Front lights must be of candle-power sufficient to readily 

i distinguish objects at 150 feet; they must not be less than 
16 or more than 24 candle-power. Measured at a point 50 

j feet or more, no portion of the reflected beam of light shall 

j rise above 32 inches from the ground. Tail lights must 



350 



^ 



♦ 

Traffic Regulations. — (Continued.) | 

show a red light in the rear, discernible 200 feet, ^\\\h a { 

white light to illuminate the license number at a distance of | 

75 feet. | 

Engines on motor vehicles should not be permitted to | 

run when left standing on the street without an attendant. | 

All motor vehicles must have an efficient muffler on the j 

exhaust pipe. No motor vehicle shall be equipped with | 

any device permitting a muffler cut-out to be operated from | 

the driver's seat. | 

Drivers of vehicles, especialh' motor cars, should con- i 

stantly be on the watch for pedestrians. The latter fre- j 

quently cross the street with heads down, therefore do not f 

expect a pedestrian to see you, but be sure you see the pe- • 

destrian in time to avoid accident. [ 

The PoHce Department has created warning signs near } 

schools, churches, hospitals and dangerous corners; watch t 

for them and observe them faithfully. They are marked » 

Quiet Zone, Danger. • 

Before backing your vehicle, be sure the way is clear of { 

bicj^les, automobiles, pedestrians, etc. If the street is not \ 

sufficiently clear to permit the movement to be done with \ 

safety, go around the block. { 

No motor vehicle shall be equipped with a whistle, siren f 

or other signaling device operated by compression from the ♦ 

motor cylinders or from the exhaust of the motor. No horn » 

or other signaling device shall be unnecessarily loud in tone, j 

nor shall they be sounded except in case of emergenc5\ ♦ 

No signal shall, be sounded in any public street between the i 

hours of midnight and 7 a. m. f 

Never stop your automobile in the middle of the street t 

to hold a conversation. Remember other drivers have as t 

much privilege on the street as you. t 

If tire or other auto trouble comes while on the street, j 

do not stop in the middle of the street to make repairs, but \ 

pull to the right-hand curb. Do likewise in leaving pas- [ 

sengers on or off. | 

Pedestrians must remember that while they have a right t 
to cross the street at legally designated crossings, they must 



351 



Traffic Regulations. — (Continued.) 
not expect a vehicle driver to exercise all the care. They 
should cross the street at right angles in a line with the 
property line, always casting their eyes in the direction in 

I which traffic is approachig. 

1 Do not park your vehicle on the left side of a one-way 

♦ street, or in any open zone, or within 20 feet of a fire plug. 
I Vehicle drivers are requested to report to the Police De- 

♦ partment the presence of glass or other objects dangerous 

♦ to automobile tires in the street. If the name of the of- 
j fender is known report him. . 
j Do not pass a street car while it is stopped loading or un- 

♦ loading passengers. 

I Be particularly courteous to women driving automobiles. 

I On the other hand, women drivers should not impose on the 

j rights of others. 

! Do not cross at right-of-way street, or street with a car 

I track without coming to a full stop. 

j In the congested section when changing direction, point 

I the hand indicating the direction the movement is to be 

j made. 

♦ In parking your car on Canal Street, do it so as to econo- 
t mize space; frequently one car occupies space sufficient 

♦ for three, thereby shutting off parking space from others. 
j All members of the police force are instructed to be cour- 
j teous and considerate to every person with whom they come 
j in contact. i 

♦ People are asked to report at once to the Superintendent ! 

♦ of Police any incivility on th part of Traffic Officr. j 
j Send your suggestion to the Motor League of Louisiana, I 
j who will in turn take it up with the Police Department. j 



THE OLD DOCTOR'S ROMANCE. 



A STORY OF A CREOLE TOWN 

By George Augustin. 

MIRELLE — Died on Wednesday, November 18th, 1896, Dr. j 

Claude Mirelle, aged seventy-two years. Interment private. ♦ 

In looking over my morning paper the other day I came j 

across the above announcement. j 

Claude Mirelle dead! Poor eccentric old man, his long j 

and tedious search for the ideal, whose glamour had dazzled | 

his life, was at last ended, and his wearied soul had found | 

eternal rest in that Mysterious Region we are taught to be- j 

lieve we are destined to inhabit when our heartthrobs are 1 

hushed in immutable silence. i 

Claude Mirelle, physician of the old school, philanthropist 
and scholar, was for j^ears a familiar sight in New Orleans. 
His favorite amusement was to promenade up and down 
Canal street. He was a typical Creole, of dignified and mili- 
tary bearing, and when I noticed him coming down the 
street, he reminded me of a figure in an antique miniature 
painted on ivory, which had just stepped out of its frame. 
His features were delicate and acqueline, and his jet black 
eyes had looked the world in the face for more than three 
score and ten years. Upon a head of wavy curls, spotlessly 
white, sat a glossy hat. The Van Dyke beard was of purest 
white, and curly, and the moustache artistically waxed. He 
invariably sported a long Prince Albert coat, a waistcoat of 
fancy stuff, and trousers of a delicate gray. From his 
watch pocket hung a curiously carved charm, representing 
Faith, Hope and Charity. 

He carried a slender gold headed cane. His figure was 
light, sinewy, graceful — almost jauntj^ in its bearing. He 
had a courtly salute for every lady he met, and a smile for 
the brighteyed girls, most of whom smiled in return, for 
they all knew the gallant, noble hearted old man and were 
proud to be noticed by him. 

It was a few weeks before the burning of the historic St. 
Charles Hotel that I last saw Claude Mirelle. 

I was seated among a group of newspaper men and bon- 
vivants in the hotel rotunda, chatting about current events 
and swapping tales of dubious veracity, when the old gentle- 



}5H 



^ » ■ » ■ 



men ascended the granite steps and took a seat near me, 
cheerily joining in the conversation. 

"You are so popular with everybody," I pleasantly re- 
marked to the newcomer, **it is strange that you never join 
any of our clubs. All doors are open to you, and any club 
would be only too glad to enroll you as a member. Your 
election would be unanimous. It is true that you are no 
longer an adolescent, but you are still as lively as any of us 
young fellows. You must become one of the boys, Mr. 
Mirelle." 

The old gentleman's face grew sombre. 

"I thank you very much," he said, "but 1 will have to 
decline the honor." 

We all crowded around him and persisted in obtaining a 
favorable answer. 

"I entreat you not to insist," observed Mirelle, almost 
brusquely. "Never — ^never I tell you." 

We looked at each other in amazement. Such a display 
of il-humor was so inconsistent with the old Creole's habi- 
tual cheerfulness, that we did not know what to attribute 
it to. We said nothing to hurt his feelings ; on the contrary 
we were trying to extend to him flattering courtesies. 

Mirelle noticed our looks of pained surprise and re- 
marked, in his usual affable way: 

"I beg you a thousand pardons, gentlemen. You uncon- 
sciously recalled to my mind painful memories, and I forgot 
myself. No, kind friends, I will never join any club. I 
owe you an explanation for my rudeness, however, and will 
tell you a story from my life." 

He sighed, and resting his snowy head on the back of his 
chair, was about to speak when he suddenly pressed his 
hands to his temple and moaned aloud. We all rushed to 
him, but he motioned us away. 

"It is nothing," he said, smiling sadly. "I overestimated 
my strength, gentlemen. I cannot relate this story to-day." 

He arose and walked away, apparently unconcerned, his 
head erect and his step firm and sprightly. 

From that day our little group missed the old Creole, 
and we concluded that we had unconsciously offended him. 
When one of us met him, however, he greeted us with his 



354 



j usual affability and when we reproached him for having 

} abandoned us, he would laughingly reply : 

j '1 prefer walking on Canal street and look at the pretty 

j girls." 

j And then with a merry twinkle in his still undimmed eyes 

I he walked away. 

j A few months later, I found a bulky envelope on my desk. 

I On opening it, I found within a manuscript, on which was 

I pinned this note : 

j ''I confide to you, my young friend, this wild story of my 

I life. Do not use it until after my death. I feel I will not 

I linger long here. I see my ideal's pale arms stretched forth 

} to me across the chasm which separates me from immor- 

{ tality, and I will soon be at her side and beg forgiveness for 

j my grievous sin. 

j ^'CLAUDE MIRELLE." 

1 "• 

I Now that his poor bones are resting in the old St. Louis 

I Cemetery, I feel no restraint in giving the world the story 

j of Claude Mirelle. 

! The manuscript reads as follows : 

t At the time this incident happened I was twenty-five. I 

am now over seventy. You will see that the story is not 
new; but it made such a deep impression on me that its 
minutest details are inflexibly fixed in my memory. 

From my twentieth year to the date when the events I am 
about to relate happened,* I led an exceedingly fast life. 
Although my personal income was ample, I soon dissipated 
it in all sorts of orgies. To meet my obligations, I had to 
appeal to my proud old father. He paid every cent with- 
out grumbling. This circumstance humbled my pride so 
much that I resolved, come what may, never again to seek 
his assistance. I had about $5,000 left, a mere pittance 
for one of my birth and habits, and I made up my mind 
to risk it all in a last desperate effort to retrieve my losses. 
If I won, I would reform ; if I lost, a pistol shot would end 
all. I was then only twenty-five, the very age at which life 
should have the most allurements. But I was desperate, 
and determined to carry out my intentions. 

On a coid, dismal, rainy Christmas night, after attending 
a special performance at the opera, I sought my favorite 
club, for I belonged to several. 



355 



i-—^ 



'I'll play my last game there," I thought, as I neared the 
place and contemplated the brilliant rays of light beaming 
from the windows. 

Just then the musical bells of the St. Louis Cathedral 
chimed the hour of twelve, heralding to an expectant world 
the dawn of another Christian year. It was a solemn re- 
minder of an event which happened nearly two thousand 
years before, on that holy night when the radiant Star of 
Bethlehem guided the three travelers to the humble cradle 
of the Christ Child. But such thoughts did not enter my 
brain on this Christmas night. 

I hastened my steps, impelled by a feverish anxiety to 
know my fate. 

At the entrance I stumbled upon a dark object lying near 
the wall, and stooped to investigate. It proved to be a 
little beggar-girl of about a dozen years. She was pale, 
haggard and sickly looking, and was loosely wrapped in a 
tattered shawl, which barely protected her thinly clad body 
from the icy, penetrating wind. Actuated partly by a sud- 
den charitable impulse and partly through superstition — 
for it was my life which was at stake and she might bring 
me luck — I slipped a ten-dollar gold piece in her hand. 

"Here is a Christmas present for you, my poor child," I 
observed. 

Her eyes opened and she mumbled a few words of grati- 
tude. The slender fingers tightly clutched the coin, and 
the wearied eyes again closed in repose. 

A few moments later I was in the gaming room. There 
were hardly a dozen players present, but they were all old- 
timers, slaves to the game, and heavy betters. 

It was in the days of opulence, of floating gambling pal- 
aces on the Mississippi River, when whole fortunes were 
staked and lost in a single night, and the prosperous planter 
reduced to beggary in a few hours. 

At first I had a run of good luck. I had won $2,000 and 
began to think the little beggar girl would prove my mascot. 

My winnings increased to $5,000, $10,000, $25,000, $60,- 
000. Surely I would bankrupt everybody. But luck went 
the other way. I lost with astonishing rapidity. 

You have yourself probably been there and know how 
it is. 



S.jG 



At 2 o'clock in the morning I was a ruined man. I arose 
outwardly calm, but at heart desperate. 

''You can have your revenge the next time," remarked 
the dealer, smiling encouragingly. 

j ''Yes, yes, the next time," I vaguely replied, staggering 

j out of the room. 

j "Take up your cards, gentlemen," echoed the monotonous 

I tones of the dealer. 

I Another had taken my place and the game went on as if 

[nothing had happened. 

. When I reached the cloakroom an attendant helped me 

J with my overcoat and I mechanically looked into the glass. 

{ I was as pale as a corpse. I w^ent down the dimly lighted 

} staircase. Hal a dozen slaves were sleeping here and 

{ there. One of them dazedly glanced up as I passed by and 

I immediately went to sleep again. I lit a cigar. 

I "The last one I'll ever smoke," I mused. 

I I lived but a short distance from the club, and had re- 

I solved to blow out my brains as soon as I entered my room, 

I The heavy door leading to the street closed behind me, 

{ I was outside at last. The cold damp air chilled me. Lost 

I in sombre thoughts, I had not noticed where I walked and 

I stumbled upon something soft and yielding which lay in my 

i path. I stopped impatiently and looked do\Mi; it was the 

i little beggar girl. In the feverish excitement attendant to 

I my losses I had forgotten her. She w^as still tranquilly 

♦ sleeping, unconsciously clasping the gold piece I had slipped 

♦ in her hand a few hours before. 

♦ An insane notion seized me. And w^hy not? Who can 
I tell? Luck is so fickle. With that insignificant coin I 
j could play again, and perhaps win back my fortune — aye 
J my life. No, it w^as hers. I had given it to her, and I had 
j no right to risk it. Suppose I lost again? I would be a 
{ thief, a scoundrel. But no, I would not — could not lose. 
I The coin had been so long in her innocent hands, it was 
j bound to bring luck. Like a hunted criminal I glanced fur- 
} tivel}^ around. No one was looking. I gently unclasped 
j the slender fingers, secured the glittering piece, and fled up 
j the carpeted sairs. 

j With fluttering heart I entered the gaming room and 

j threw^ the coin on the green cloth. 

j Luck w^as all on my side now. I won once, twice — aJ- 



357 



Four o'clock struck. There was a heaped-up pile of gold, 
silver, checks and due bills in front of me. As the moments 
sped, the players dropped out one by one and left me alone 
with my gains. 



♦ 

♦ ways. I never lost a single game. I thought of the poor 
j little beggar-girl sleeping below, and made a movement to 
j go and repay her. But I checked myself — an interruption 

♦ might change the luck. Again I feverishly plunged in the 
j game. I risked stakes which ran in the tens of thousands, 

♦ and won every time. 

♦ 
♦ 

♦ 

♦ 

♦ ' f had' won two hundred and thirty thousand dollars! 

I j ; T?hi's may seem to you a fabulous sum to win at a single 

♦ ' sitting, but in those days men gambled their fortunes, their 

♦ ; plantations, their slaves, and then blew out their brains, or 

♦ ended their ruined lives in the madhouse. 

! 

j I was exultant, I could now reward the poor litle thing 

j and make her rich beyond her wildest dreams. She would 

} be happy all her life. I would restore the roses to her faded 

j cheeks and cause those sad eyes to shine with unrestrained 

j happiness. The debt was a just one and would be returned 

j with hundredfold interest. 

I I picked up my wininngs and had them put away in a 

j safe until morning. I filled my hat to overflowing with 

I gold pieces, as an introductory offering to my little mascot, 

I and ran down the steps with wildly beating heart. What? 

♦ No one there? Where could she be? It was impossible 
j that she had gone ; why, she was there so sound asleep a little 

♦ over an hour ago! Ah, what is this? A piece of faded 

♦ calico from her dress probably. She must be around-some 

♦ where. 

j A man passed by. I wildly questioned him, asking him 

I if he had not seen a little girl wandering about, accusing him 

j of having stolen my mascot, who had just saved me from a 

j dishonorable death. He looked at me in alarm and has- 

♦ tened away, thinking he was dealing with a madman or 
I a malefactor. 

I Where could she be? Where could she have gone? 1 

j peeped into every nook and corner. I searched every arch- 

I way, by-street and alley. I even looked into the gutters, un- 

j der bridges — nothing. Could it be that I would not find her? 

♦ 

t ■ ^ 

3oS 



Then I would be a vulgar thief, for the money was rightly 
hers, and I had stolen it — yes, stolen, like any common skulk- 
ing criminal. 

I went to the police station and offered a princely re- 
ward for any tidings of the little beggar girl. The best 
detectives on the force were sent out. I waited for hours. 
No news, no ray of hope. 

The next day I set out personally to find her. I visited 
the poorest and most miserable quarters of New Orleans. 
I spent hours in the slums, questioning everybody and 
frightening every one by my half-crazed actions, I went 
home disheartened and weary with my search. As I enter- 
ed the house my servant handed me a letter. 
I "The chief of police sent this for you." he said. 

} I tremblingly tore open the envelope and read as follows : 

I "The body of a girl answering the description furnished 

I by you was found in the Old Basin this morning." 

{ I frantically rushed to the police station. Yes, it was 

I she. She had no doubt awakened with a light heart, 

I thinking of the many good things she would buy with the 

I gold coin the "kind gentlemen" had given her, only to find 

{ it gone — stolen — when she looked for it. Disappointed, 

j crushed, tormented by the pangs of hunger and the icy 

I blasts which benumbed her poorly-clad body, she had 

I wandered aimlessly about the city, until finding herself on 

I the brink of the sluggish canal, she had ended her sorrow- 

I ing life beneath its dark, merciless waters. As I knelt be- 

} side that still form and looked upon these wane emaciated 

{ features, where suffering was vividly portrayed, I solemnly 

j vowed to devote my life and fortune to deeds of charity. Not 

♦ being able to repay the one I had wronged, I have tried to 
{ make amends by lightening the cares of suffering humanity. 

♦ When I die all my possessions will go to the deserving poor 

♦ of this great, wicked city. 



j And as you ride in the modern electric cars along one of 

♦ the fashionable avenues of New Orleans and admire a cer- 



j tain stately edifice devoted to the welfare of the orphans 

j and deserving poor, give it more than a casual glance, for it 

j is a glorious monument to the memory of an unassuming 

j and romantic philanthropist — ^the munificent gift be- 

I queathed by the will of Claude Mirelle. 

I Requiescat in pace! 



359 



.«»»«.<4 



For Physicians' Prescriptions 



Autobiography of an Androgyne 

By Ralph Werther — Jennie June 

Edited by Alfred W. Herzog, M. D., Ph. B., M. A. 

{Editor MEDICO-LEGAL JOURNAL) 

Portraying the inner history and the life experi nee of a 
bisexual human. Something new in medical literature, 
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only to physicians, lawyers, legislators, psychologists, and 
sociologists. 

MEDICO-LEGAL JOURNAL | 

1 23 West 83d Street New York City j 

Augustin Book Agency \ 

1216 Maison Blanche Bldg. New Orleans, La. j 

k 

♦ 

Edward H. Walsdorf \ 

Ethical Pharmaceuticals 



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Tumaco, Colombia, and all Ports Ecuador 

For Rates and Particulars Apply 

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91 1 Hennen Building Phone Main 2842 



360 



JOTS IN THE MEDICAL HISTORY OF NEW 

ORLEANS. 



} By A. E. Fossier, M. D., Neiv Orleans. 

j 1700 — Dr. Barrot, the King's Physician, was the first mem- 

j ber of his profession in Louisiana. 

1 1704 — Dr. Jalot, the second physician mentioned in the his- 

j tory of Louisiana, was an eccentric surgeon and an 

♦ intrepid and indefatigable traveler. 

I 1718 — City founded by Bienville on the site of the Indian 

! village of Tchouthouoma. 

j 1724 — July 25. Act forbidding captains of slave ships to 

! sell or buy any negro before health inspections are 

j made and permission to land the negro given, under 

j penalty of fine of 1,000 livres, to be paid to the in- 

♦ former. 

j 1727 — August 6. Six Ursuline Nuns arrived in New Or- 

♦ leans to open a girls' school and attend to the hos- 
j pital. 

j 1729— In ''Articles for Regulation of the King's Troops," 

j we find : 'The physician shall be accompanied by an 

j assistant to the surgeon, who shall write down the 

j bleeding orders of the regiment. "The physician, as 

j well as the surgeon, shall taste the soup and the wine, 

I shall see the meat and the bread, and shall forbid that 

j any fruit be given the patients or any food unfit for 

♦ them." "No soldiers shall be permitted to make a 
j will in favor of the officers of the hospital, where 
j he shall be, not even in favor of the chaplain or the 
j lattor's convent, under pretext of pious legacy." 
j "All the officers of the hospital shall see to it that 
j none of the patients or atetndants shall blaspheme, 
j curse or use improper words. 

j 1736 — Jean Louis, a sailor in the Company of the Indies, 

j died and left 10,000 livres for the establishment of a 

I hospital, called "Hospice des Pauvres." 

j 1737 — Six patients were in the Jean Louis Hospital, which 

j stood on the west side of Rampart Street, upon the 

I 

^ 

301 



square bounded by St. Peter and Toulouse Streets. 
Hospital, partly civil and military, was built and 
committed to the charge of the Ursuline Nuns, sit- 
uated at the corner of Decatur and Ursulines. 
1738 — Dr. Prat, physician of the King's Hospital, asked 
for means to establish a garden of medicinal plants 
and a house for his residence. He requested a sal- 
ary of 2,000 livres, because the inhabitants were ac- 
customed to be treated for nothing by the physician 
and the latter had no resource but from the favor of 
the King. 
1768 — November 7. Dr. Lebau, in the pay of His Majes- 
ty, testified in an energetic and fearless manner that 
the Spanish Governor Ulloa committed acts of op- 
pression and despotism. 
1769 — Traditional appearance of yellow fever for the first 

time in New Orleans. No authentic data. 
1776 — Physicians treated slaves on plantation at the rate of 

$1.00 per head per year. 
1779 — Epidemic of smallpox. Jean Louis destroyed by 

hurricane. 
1781 — Don Andress de Almonastery Roxos, formerly war 
clerk and civil notary, offered to rebuild the hospital 
at his own cost, expense amounting to $114,000, and 
to appropriate a yearly revenue for its support. 
1784 — Dr. Almonastery undertook the construction of the 

^'New Hospital St. Charles." 
1784 — Hospital completed, on same site as Jean Louis' Hos- 
pital. 
1785 — One of the first acts of Governor Miro was the es- 
tablishment by the Cabildo of a hospital for lepers on 
a ridge of high land in the rear of New Orleans, be- 
I tween the river and Bayou St. John, known as ''Lep- 

♦ ers Land." 

1 1793— '*Le Montier de la Louisiane." No. 26, August 25, 

j ends with the beginning of a very interesting letter 

j by a physician, who says that one shall simplify as 

j much as possible the ointments and remedies used 

j and also to substitute at the right time equivalent 

j means to relieve the patient of interior as well as 



exterior disease. 



362 



1795 — Dr. James Leduc was supplanted as House Surgeon 

of the Charity Hospital by Dr. Louis Giovellina. Dr. 

Giovellina was appointed by Almonaster with a 

monthly salary of $30. 

1796 — First authentic invasion of^New Orleans by yellow 

fever. 
1798 — Dr. Andreas de Almonaster died. Dr. James Leduc 
was apprehended and fined for endeavoring to in- 
troduce the practice of vaccination as a prophylactic. 
j 1802— The hospital expenses viere $27,716.02. 

j 1805 — James Pitot, third Mayor of New Orleans, officially 

j censured in firm, unequivocal terms the administra- 

j tion of the Hospital. Claiming instances of abuse 

j of power by the director and subordinates of that 

institution. John Watkins, fourth Mayor, also 
claimed revolting abuses of authority and the re- 
;; fusal of admission of indigent sick by the director 

I of the hospital, Mr. Guinault. 

j 1808 — The first step taken by the State Legislature to ex- 

I amine into the qualifications of physicians before 

j they should be permitted to practice medicine in the 

I Territory of Orleans, is embodied in an act of the 

j Legislative Council of the House of Representatives 

j of the Territory of Orleans, passed and approved 

March 23rd, 1808. 
1809— September 23. The new Charity Hospital of St. 
Charles burned to the ground. Patients were trans- 
ferred to the Jourdan plantation, below the city. Dr. 
Blauquet was Dr. Giovellina's successor. Dr. San- 
chez was Dr. Blauquet's successor. 
1811 — April 23. Legislature provides, through a special 
,act, for a thorough organization of the administration 
of the Charity Hospital. Dr. Martin physician to 
hospital. 
1814 — Hospital built in square bounded by Canal, Com- 
mon, Phillippa and Baronne ,on lots known as Uni- 
versity Block, bought for $5,000 from city, by the 
director of the hospital, Mr. Guinault. 
1815 — Construction of New Orleans Charity Hospital in- 
augurated by Dr. McConnell, House Surgeon. 
1816— The Act of March 23rd, 1808, was abrogated in 



363 



^4 



March, 1816,and another was passed prescribing 
the formalities to be observed in order to obtain the 
right to practice physics or the profession of apothe- 
cary within the State of Louisiana. 

1820 — The Physico-Medical Society of New Orleans was 
incorporated, its object being the discussion relating 
to medicine and natural philosophy. Dr. M. W. 
Mercer was one of its founders. 

1823 — February 16. The river at New Orleans practical- 
ly frozen, and people skated on the marshes. The 
Legislature allowed six gambling houses to be 
licensed in New Orleans and its suburbs, on payment 
of each of a State tax of $5,000. The Charity Hos- 
pital College of New Orleans were the beneficiaries. 

1832 — The old Charity Hospital, situated on the square 
bounded by Canal, Phillippa, Carondelet and Com- 
mon, was purchased from the city for a State House. 

1841 — First ordinance for the establishment of a Board of 
Health in the City of New Orleans was passed by 
the General Council in June, 1841. The Board con- 
sisted of nine members — ^three aldermen, three phy- 
sicians and three private citizens. 

1843 — The Board was remiss in its duties and fell in dis- 
solution on the approach of the sickly season in 1843, 
upon the voluntary withdrawal of some of the old 
members, when the Medico-Chirurgical Society was 
constituted by the General Council a Board of 
Health of the City of New Orleans, and vested with 
all the powers of the former Board. 

1843 — Incorporation of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, 
the Medical College of Louisiana and the Medical 
College of Orleans. 

1844 — The initial number of the New Orleans Medical and 
Surgical Journal, the first medical journal published 
south of Louisville, was issued in May, 1844, and has 
appeared continuously ever since (except during the 
Civil War). We reproduce the following introduc- 
tory remarks published by its editors, Drs. Erasmus 
D. Fenner and A. Hester, as it is interesting and 
throws some instructive light upon the medical con- 
ditions of the day: 



304 



''If we look around us and survey the immense re- j 

gion which we claim as our own literary and j 

professional doman — the vast Valley of the Missis- j 

sippi with its numerous States and varied institu- j 

tions. its peculiar climate, soil, productions and dis- ♦ 

eases — the Southern Atlantic States enclosed be- ♦ 

tween the Alleghanies and the ocean — the rich West I 

Indies with their tropical climate — the Mexican Gulf j 

cities and the interior of Mexico — the flourishing j 

new republic which has recently shot forth its Lone j 

Star in the political firmament — and especially our j 

own growing city, containing already upwards of } 

one hundred thousand inhabitants, with its exten- | 

sive commercial intercourse and large amount of j 

shipping, its four hospitals and great variety of hu- j 

man species and diseases, its Medical College and j 

Medico-Chirurgical Society; who can deny the ex- j 

traordinary advantages our position commands for j 

the concentration and cultivation of medical science? ♦ 

"It is in the South we must study Southern dis- j 

cases. We earnestly hope that the Journal which we j 

are now projecting will give a fresh impulse to med- j 

ical study and investigation ; that it will be the means j 

of combining the isolated and disjointed labors and j 

observations of the numerous talented physicians in j 

the Southern States into form possessing strength, j 

symmetry and usefulness, and that it may awaken | 

the Southern physician to a just appreciation of the i 

profession he has chosen. ♦ 

"On fine, that it may elevate the medical profes- } 

sion from the state of a mere money-making trade j 

to its proper position, the noblest pursuit that ever j 

j engaged the attention of man. j 

j "We call upon our confreres throughout the land I 

♦ to arouse themselves from their lethargy and come ♦ 
j forward to the mighty work. The physicians of our | 
! larger cities are highly respected for their talents j 

♦ and acquirements, and justly occupy a lofty posi- j 

♦ tion in society, and we honestly believe there is j 
j scarcely a town, village or neighborhood throughout j 
j the many States which lie around us that does not 



J 



>G5 



claim some member of the profession who has tal- 
ents enough, if he would apply himself in the man- 
ner which the young physician is compelled to prac- 
tice if he ever hopes for success in a large city to do 
honor to his calling and shed lustre on his name. ( 
*'Yet what is the humiliating declaration we are 
bound to make. Few, but very few physicians in 
the South have ever offered contributions to medical 
literature; and there is not a medical journal to be 
found in the United States, south of Louisville. Will 
it be believed abroad when we add that in this vast 
and interesting region there exists no less than four 
medical colleges whose halls are annually attended 
by students, and which are granting diplomas from 
year to year? To these colleges we would now ap- 
peal, and entreat the mto come forward and let the 
world see the. extent of their pretensions. Have they, 
too, assumed the awful responsibility of naming 
teachers in medicine for the sole and degrading ob- 
ject of making money Would they sacrifice the 
noble attributes of science upon the altar of Mam- 
mon " 

1855 — In accordance with the law, approved March 15th, 
1855, to establish a quarantine for the protection of 
the State, the Board of Health has located a Quar- 
antine Station on a piece of land situated on the 
left bank of the Mississippi river, distant from the 
city about 72 miles and about 34 miles from the head 
of the Passes. 

1856 — In the May number of the New Orleans Medical 
News and Hospital Gazette, 1856, there is an edi- 
torial comment welcoming an institution which was 
duly organized and incorporated under the style and 
title of the ''New Orleans School of Medicine," sit- 
uated on Common Street opposite the Charity Hos- 
pital. 

FACULTY. 

Erasmus D. Fenner, M. D., Professor of Theory 
and Practice of Medicine. 

A. Forster Axson, M. D., Professor of Physiology. 
Thomas Peniston, M. D., Professor of Clinical 



366 



Medicine and Auscultation and Percussion. 

Samuel Choppin, M. D., Professor of Surgery. 

Isaac L. Crawcour, M. D., Professor of Chemistry 
and Medical Jurisprudence. 

Howard Smith, M. D., Professor of Materia Med- 
ica and Therapeutics. 

John M. W. Picton, M. D., Professor of Diseases of 
Women and Children. 

D. Warren Brickell, M. D., Professor of Ob- 
stetrics. 

Cornelius C. Beard, M. D., Professor of Anatomy. 

Anthony A. Peniston, M. D., Adjunct Professor of 
Anatomy. 

, Erection of the present Charity Hospital. 

1878 — Birth of Orleans Parish Medical Society. 

Organization meeting was held April 27, 1878, and 

the Charter and By-Laws adopted May 6, 1876. Dr. 

C. C. Tarpin was elected President and Dr. A. B. 

Miles Secretary. 

Birth of Louisiana State Medical Society. 

Dr. J. C. Egan was the first President and Dr. 

Thomas Layton the first Secretary. 
1882 — No meeting of the Louisiana State Medical Society, 

on account of crevasses. 
1890 — Extensive crevasses prevented meeting of Louisiana 

State Medical Society. 
1897 — For the third time in its history, there was no meet- 
ing of the Louisiana State Medical Society, due to 

crevasses. 



367 



SOUTHERN 

AMERICAN SODA 

STORES 



INCORPORATED 



V 



Cakes 


Ice Cream 


Candies 


Sandwiches 


Chocolate 


Sherbet 


Cigars 


Soda 


Cigarettes 


Soft Drinks 


Coffee 





•^ 



141 - DAUPHINE STREET - 141 

PHONE M-3494 
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA 



I ►■■»■»■■ 



3G8 



ORLEANS PARISH MEDICAL SOCIETY. 



Office and Library, 141 Elk Place, New Orleans, La. 
Phone Main 1514. 



Meets on the Second and Fourth Mondays in each month, 
except in December, when only one meeting is held that 
month, on the Second Saturday. Election of officers takes 
place at this meeting. 



Officers for 1920. | 

Dr. H. E. Bernadas President j 

Dr. Hamilton P. Jones First Vice-President j 

Dr. Jerome E. Landry Second Vice-President ! 

Dr. J. M. Hountha Third Vice-President j 

Dr. E. A. Ficklen Secretary | 

Dr. Foster M. Johns Treasurer j 

Dr. S. Chaille Jamison Librarian j 

Dr. M. P. Boebinger. . Additional Members Board Directors | 

Dr. Isaac Ivan Lemann '' " " " j 

Dr. T. A. Maxwell 

Miss G. L. Durr Assistant Librarian ! 

Miss D. M. Dillon . .Assistant Secretary-Treasurer 



869 



LOUISIANA STATE MEDICAL SOCIETY. 

Officers. 

D. E. L. Henry President 

Lecompte. 

Dr. C. P. Gray First Vice-President 

Monroe. 

Dr. C. S. Barrow Second Vice-President 

Shreveport. 

Dr. T. J. Dimilry Third Vice-President 

New Orleans. 

Dr. P. T. Talbot Secretary-Treasurer 

141 Elk Place, New Orleans. Phone Main 1514. 

Dr. H. E. Bernadas Chairman House of Delegates 

New Orleans. 



Councilors. 
Dr. Paul J. Gelpi, Secretary. . .First Congressional District 

New Orleans. 
Dr. Homer Dupuy, Chairman. . .Second Congressional Dist. 

New Orleans. 

Dr. B. W. Smith Third Congressional District 

Franklin. 

Dr. J. E. Knighton Fourth Congressional District 

Shreveport. 

Dr. J. L. Adams Fifth Congressional District 

Monroe. 

Dr. Clarence Pierson Sixth Congressional District 

Jackson. 

Dr. E. M. Ellis Seventh Congressional District 

Crowley. 

Dr. S. J. Couvillon Eighth Congressional District 

Moreauville. 
Forty-first annual meeting will be held at the Hutchin- 
son Memorial, New Orleans, April 24 and 26, 1920. 



*-**- t 



DELEGATES TO THE 1920 MEETING. 



Acadia — Dr. M. S. Hoffpauir, Crowley, La. 

Avoyelles— Dr. T. A. Royg, Mansura, La.; Dr. R. G. Du- 
cote, Bordeleonville, La. 

Bossier — Dr. C. H. Irion, Benton, La. 

Caddo— Dr. L. Abramson, Dr. J. C. Willis, Dr. S. C. Bar- 
row, Dr. L. H. Pirkle, Dr. C. P. Munday, Shreve- 
port. La. 

Calcasieu — Dr. Louis Hebert, Lake Charles, La. 

Caldwell— Dr. B. King, Clarks, La. 

Claiborne — Dr. P. Gibson, Homer, La. 

De Soto— Dr. H. W. Jarrell, Mansfield, La. 

East Baton Rouge — Drs. C. A. Weis and H. G. Riche, Baton 
Rouge, La. 

East Feliciana — Dr. J. W. Lea, Jackson, La. 

Iberville — Dr. W. E. Barker, Plaquemine, La. 

Jackson — Dr. A. E. Fisher, Choudrant, La. 

Lafourche — Dr. F. T. Goaux, Lockport, La. 

Orleans — Drs. Henry Leidenheimer, Adolph Henriques, 
Robert Bernhard, William H. Harris, Charles V. Uns- 
worth, P. Graffagnino, Frank J. Chalaron, Geo. S. 
Bel, S. M. Blackshear, Allan Eustis, William H. See- 
mann, Foster M. Johns, E. L. Leckert, Lucian H. Lan- 
dry, W. H. Knolle. 

Ouachita — Drs. R. W. Faulk nd I. Hirsch, Monroe, La. 
Pointe Coupee— Dr. R. M. G. Carruth, New Roads, La. 
Rapides — Dr. I. L. Wilson, Alexandria, La. ; Dr. E. de Nux, 
Exno, La. 

Sabine — Dr. T. B. Younger, Fisher, La. 

St. Charles — Dr. L. T. Donaldson, Sr., Reserve, La. 

St. Landry — Dr. J. P. Saizan, Opelousas, La. 

St. Tammany — Dr. J. F. Burguoi, Covington, La. 

Terrebonne — Dr. Leon J. Menville, Houma, La. 

Vernon — Dr. D. 0. Willis, Leesville, La. 

Webster-— Dr. W. McDade, Sibley, La. 



371 



PROGRAM. 



SATURDAY, April 24, 1920. 

Meeting of the House of Delegates, Hutchinson Memorial. 
Call to Order 10 A. M. 

MONDAY, APRIL 26, 1920. 

Morning Session. 
Meeting of the House of Delegates, Hutchinson Memorial. 

Call to Order , 10 A. M. 

Evening Session. 
General Meeting. 
Hutchinson Memorial. 
Call to Order 8 P. M. 

1. President's Address Dr. E. L. Henry, President 

Lecompte, La. 

2. Annual Oration Gov.-Elect John M. Parker 

New Orleans, La. 
Adjournment of the 1920 meeting. 

HOUSE OF DELEGATES. 

Dr. H. E. Bernadas, New Orleans Chairman 

Following is the Order of Business: 



! 1. Call to Order. 

j 2. Roll Call. 

j 3. Reading and Adopting of 1919 Minutes. 

♦ 4. Reports of Officers. 

j 5. Reports of Committees. 



6. Unfinished Business. 

7. New Business. 

8. Adjournment. 



372 



INDEX 



j American Medical Association — 

j Committee of Arrangements, personnel of .... . 10 

♦ Hotel Headquarters 11 

j New Orleans Session 11 

j Officers, 1919-1920 12 

j Sections and Chairmen of Sections 13 

I Books of 1919 293 

j Charity Hospital of Louisiana — 

Medical and Surgical Staffs 223 

j Historical Sketch, Albert E. Fossier, M.D 211 

j Chiropody Law of Louisiana 261 

j Dental Law of Louisiana 253 

Dentists, Directory of 149 

Directory of New Orleans Doctors 17 

Graduate Schools of Medicine. (See "Tulane and 
"Loyola." 

Hospitals, Sanitariums, Clinics, etc 223 

Hotel Dieu, Historical Sketch of, Ernest S. Leivis, 

j M.D 219 

j Jots in the Medical History of New Orleans, Albert 

E. Fossier, M. D 361 

I Journals, Medical 283 

I Laws : 

j Louisiana Chiropody Law 261 

j Louisiana Dental Law 253 

j Louisiana Medical Law 243 

j Louisiana Nurses' Board of Examiners, John T. 

I Crebbin, M. D 279 

Louisiana State Board of Health, Historical Sketch, 

i G. Farrar Patton, M. D 235 

Louisiana State Medical Society, Presidents and Sec- 

retairies, 1878 to 1920, Augustin 271 

Loyola University : 

Post-Graduate School of Medicine, Joseph A. 

Danna, M. D 197 

j School of Dentistry, Alfred Leefe, D. D. S 259 

♦ Medical Journals of the United States and Canada. . 283 

Medical Law of Louisiana 243 

New Orleans Polyclinic. (See Tulane Post-Grad- 

i uate School.) 

New Orleans Highways and Byways 308 



373 



Nurses, Board of Examiners. (See Louisiana Nurses' 
Board of Examiners.) 

Office Buildings 101 

Orleans Parish Medical Society: 

History of, Charles Chassaignac, M. D 267 

Officers, 1920 369 

Presidents and Secretaries, 1878 to 1920, Au- 

giistin 269 

Presbyterian Hospital of New Orleans, W. D. Phil- 
lips, M.D 205 

Physicians having offices outside of the "Business 

District" 121 

Sanitariums 223 

Specialists — 

Physicians 85 

Dentists 171 

Stethoscope, History of the 281 

Street Guide of New Orleans — 

Why New Orleans Streets Are Crooked 308 

Canal Street 314 

Downtown Streets : 

Parallel to River 341 

River to Lake 332 

Uptown Streets: 

Parallel to River 325 

River to Lake 318 

Edgewood and Gentilly Terrace 338 

Lakeview 317 

Suburbs, Additions and Residential Parks 344 

Traffic Regulations 350 

The Old Doctor's Romance, Augustin 353 

Trained Nursse, Announcement about. 280 

Trained Nurses' Board of Examiners. (See Louisi- 
ana Nurses' Board of Examiners.) 
Touro Infirmary, Historical Sketch of, Maud Loeber, 

M.D 201 

Tulane University — 

Historical Sketch of, Isadore Dyer, M. D. 186 

Graduate School of; Historical Sketch, Charles 

Chassaignac, M, D 199 

School of Dentistry of, C. V. Vignes, D. D. S..,. 



374 



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